Methods of combining a series of more efficient aircraft engines into a unit, or modular units

ABSTRACT

The present invention generally relates to units of engines and more particularly to units containing a unique combined-cycle (combustion-detonation) “counter-rotation, anti-gyration, gyroscopic,” turbine fan-jet/free-piston engine configuration for induced air supercharging and boosting the performance of novel Ramjet engines or Ramjet engine configurations by improving internal air-stream dynamics. These dynamics are the result of co-operative air stream intermixing through convergent, supercharge-attenuated, inducted, compressed, tuned, pre-heated ambient air. Achieved through the varying of the geometric structural form and the utilization of unique engines and air induction and propulsion conformations, aided with supplemental air, fuel, oxygen and optiomal water and electrolyte charging.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE WORKINGS AND EMBODIMENTS OF THIS INVENTION

Units of unique engine modalities, and/or modules, consisting of a series of three or more aircraft engines of novel types. Each unique engine or engine combination or conformation, acting independently or together present an advancement in the state of the art, and acting in concert represent an improvement in the performance of the specifically derived attributes. The unit modules are made up of a combination of components consisting of specific engines and the means to connect or separate them into particular operational parts and supportive structures.

A Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine, augmented (“supercharged” air induction) by an ambient atmosphere aspirated combustion-cycle “counter-rotation” turbine fan-jet engine. Referred to as the equal and opposite acting turbine fan-jet engine allowing it to be nearly instantly reversible. Having an internal central free-piston detonation-cycle engine within its hollow drive shaft that utilizes a self-contained supply of oxidant and fuel (carbohydrate or hydrocarbon or hydrogen).

The Ramjet, Ramjet conformation, or jet-tube engines often simply called J-tubes, consist basically of a tube constituting (making up) a combustion zone, thereby turning the tube into a jet-tube, which is finally resolved into the completed Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine.

A brief historical statement regarding the “tube”. “The power plant proposed in 1913 by René Lorin consists, as is known, by only one flow channel designed in such a way that continuously inflowing air contrary to the direction of flight is first slowed down and damned up, then heated and accelerated beyond the inflow velocity at the discharge orifice. [So] That the whole motor assumes the shape of a pitot tube.” [Which is then referred to for simplicity sake as the jet tube.] E. Sangar*

The tube fitted with appropriately placed fuel injection nozzles and ignition means and creating an interior volume into which fuel is injected and the fuel and oxidizer become mixed and upon ignition and combustion convert the tube into a jet tube. The openings at both ends of the tube acting as inlet and exhaust ports and that other appropriate ports may be added as required by means of this invention. One such added port consisting of a jut-opposed tangent conduit tube or partition acting also as a supportive brace connecting the jet-tube engine to the turbine fan-jet engine, impeller fan driven oxidant pump (supercharger).

The Ramjet engine may utilize a means of being detached or retained, as a part of the unit core structure and may utilize adaptations designed into configurations that are best represented by the Venturi or Botanelle effect. (i.e. A constriction in the wall of a tube that conducts air and produces a stratified central zone or column of high velocity air and a low-pressure and velocity peripheral, laminar air zone into which exterior peripheral air or other fluid is introduced). This effect is characterized by a high velocity, high pressure inner central air column, and a turbulent stratified peripheral lower velocity, lower pressure layer of air developed at the intersection of intermixing and laminate air adjacent to the tube wall.

The constriction may also be produced by a body located in the center of the tube creating the stratified relatively low-pressure, low flow velocity zone of laminent turbulent air (oxidizer) adjacent to the tube wall constriction and the surface of the constricting center-body. Into which fuel and supercharged air is injected and mixed. Mixing with the higher relative velocity and pressure of the stratified central air column ignited and thereby converted into the even higher temperature, pressure and velocity of the combustion process. Exploding the pre-mixed fuel and thermal conditioned air and forcefully achieving pressures and deflagration velocities in the J. tube conformations. Causing shock flash-back compressive pulsation that brings about the stopping of the in-rushing air flow producing stabilized static pressure into which fuel is injected, ignited and thereby driving the compression and expansion processes within the “tube”. To realize at least deflagration velocities do to the constructive interactions produced by the tuned reflected harmonics within the constricted regions of the turbine engine. Obtaining detonation velocities within the restricted chambers of the Ram jet engine assisted by the discriminate use of oxygen injection.

Ejecting the pulsating explosions within the J. tubes of the Ram jet engines outward and backward, do to the in-rushing air mass and the relatively forward positioned constriction, toward the exhaust port. Creating a response reaction within the engine forcefully driving the engine and the aircraft forward while producing counter mass exhaust ejecta.

The forward component of the explosion checks the onrushing Ram inducted air momentarily stopping it, compressing, convection and radiant heating and shocking it, producing an ideal stabilized ignition and fuel injection zone into which fuel injectors and spark or glow plugs have been placed. Bringing about fuel and air ignition and combustion and thereby producing hypersonic explosive forward propelling drive. The cool onrushing Ram induced air could super-cool and quench the combustion processes. Therefore a method of reducing the amount of Ram air induction with a divergent cone shaped cowling to maintain a stabilized static pressure rise within the combustion zone of the J. tube conformations. Conversely at high velocities and high altitudes where the air is rarefied and super cold a selective method of convergent means has been devised to collect and preheat the required volumes of the air propelling and oxidizing medium.

When the term “mixing” is used relative to fuel and air and/or oxygen mixtures, it will be understood to include atomization and vaporization unless the fuel is injected in the gaseous state.

Whenever a gaseous-fluid flow is altered 90 degrees by the gas turbine engine's impeller deflection drive vanes set at an acute 45-degree angle of attack to the gas flow; the mass transfer energy is equal to one half the total energy of the inherent inertia in the gaseous-fluid flow. (This is an algorithmic extrapolated mean average involving velocity, pressure and temperature) Then deflection-transferring one-half the driving energy of that first half of the available energy and then one half again accordingly, through each series of 90-degree deflections brought about by the 45 degree oppositely driven fixed dihedral angles of the drive vanes. While being deflected from the oppositely rotating, interfacing oppositely transposed 45-degree dihedral angles of the alternate vanes driving the next set of drive impeller vanes of the gas turbine engine. This ratio of energy load distribution is altered differentially when the fluid flow is deflected by dihedral angles that are in relative motion. Terms representing converging flow altering driving elements (vanes) of the compressor stage are additive and those coefficient terms that represent diverging flow altering deflection driven, drive impeller elements are subtractive. When compared to the direct explosive driving energy applied to the driven, drive impeller vanes, this subtractive component is negligible and acts to equalize and to abate shock produced disturbances and turbulence. To realize at least quasi-detonation velocities do to the constructive interactions produced by the tuned reflected harmonics within the constricted regions of the turbine engine. Obtaining detonation velocities assisted from within by the very restricted chambers of the detonation free piston engine and further assisted by the discriminate use of oxygen or liquid oxygen and water injection.

The explosive driving force is expressed as pressure per square inch, distributed upon the surface of the impeller vanes directly but differentially, due to deflection. Inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the energy source and requiring concomitant increases in the surface square area of the drive impeller vanes. Do to the fact that the space involved exists in cubic measure, for each series or sets of vanes utilized, to achieve an equal distribution of propulsive load. This inherent inertial drive is transferred to these interacting vanes as forward and lateral force vectors, which translates into evenly distributed, differentially inter-dependent, co-operating, opposed rotation of the individual impeller driving stages further directed backward to drive other sets of drive impellers, finally being exhausted.

Whenever an explosion of combustibles occurs it is expressed in all directions leaving inertial and heat energy delivered to all the internal surfaces of an engine's combustion chamber and/or combustion field, whether the parts are at rest or in motion. The explosion is not instantaneous, but involves the partially delayed mixing of air and fuel and the partially delayed production of the flame front. Within microseconds the forces establish, form along and follow lines of least resistance directed by deflection, producing equal and opposite thrust that establishes kinetic inertial momentum forward and into the rotating elements of the engines. The rebounding gasses and the other backward directed half of the explosion, along with the remaining flame front builds heat and pressure producing the thrust to drive the next stage drive impellers with a portion of the differential pressure that forces the engine and aircraft forward.

When the vehicle that contains the engine is moving relative to the combustion processes. The whole engine as well as the drive elements can be moved under the pressure velocity of the combustion wave front until interacting subtractive energies of friction create dynamic equilibrium. The internal pressure velocities producing the forward force vectors of the engines are accumulative and added consecutively to that of the vehicle. Relatively added one to the other so that their sum velocity is greater than the forward force vector velocities of the engines as computed independently. An aircraft may be traveling at 3 Mach (Mach=the speed of sound) while the pre-combustion, combustion fluid flow average velocities within the engine's combustors do not exceed one half Mach.

The unique “gyroscopic, counter rotating, counter gyration” turbine fan-jet engine component of this invention utilizes a hub and radiating vane arrangement (FIGS. 1, 2 and 3.-20, 26, 27) that acts to centrifugal compress incoming differential pressure induced air. Forcing this air into a reduced space, producing high pressure and temperature within this space and thereby defining an aspect of the turbine engine's pre-combustion zone. Reducing the space between air and fuel to a proper ratio of temperature and pressure required to initiate and maintain combustion. Without the need for the standard static combustion chamber expansion and combustion containment vessels (combustor) or static deflector vanes (FIGS. 11-1 and 2) to insure combustion throughout the range of operation. (These compressor, combustor type turbine engines have become referred to as Brayton cycle engines.)

The high pressure of this combustion interacts directly with the vanes of the drive impeller and the vanes of a freely revolving oppositely rotating combustion mediating hub which acts to separate the compressor pressure zone from the combustion pressure zones. Driving them both by deflection in opposite directions, with the mediating hub free to be driven differentially, automatically equalizing the driven loads. (FIGS. 1, 4 and 5-20, 26) The drive impeller is fixed to a compressor impeller through a commonly shared drive shaft and drives the compressor impeller (FIGS. 4 and 5-20, 26, 27).

The standard state of the art turbine and turbo-jet engines have intervening static or rotating combustor arrangements (FIG. 11 -1) that absorb the high heat of combustion within their combustion containment walls. Greatly restricting their pressure containment capacity, meaning they are partial to blowing apart under the pressures obtainable from the blast and heat energy of the exploding fuel. Producing heat and friction loses before there is any driving gaseous interaction, greatly restricting their design parameters. A significant claim of this invention is that this included preferred turbine engine does away with the need for self-contained integral static or revolving combustion chambers.

The free-piston detonation (combustion) cycle engine (FIGS. 1 and 3-28, 29, 41, 48, 49.) aspect of this modem concept utilizes a separate (from ambient air) chemically constituted or compressed oxidant and containment tank. Allowing it to be operated separately and separate of ambient atmospheric conditions, as a booster engine for operation under overload and high altitude conditions as well as acting in part as a starting engine for the turbine aspect of the co-operatively functioning engine combination. (Combined-cycle engine) Assuring and maintaining stoichiometric combustion-detonation throughout its co-operative operation.

Pertaining to the knowledge of the workings of Venturi tubes, low-pressure, low velocity and high pressure, high velocity differential regions can be produced within any straight tubes when they move through a fluid medium such as air. This stratification of pressure zones is do to the nature of airwaves. Which when confined within a tube constriction, produce first a standing wave high-pressure/velocity air zone followed by a standing wave low-pressure/velocity air zone without the need for other constrictions in the tubes, this is to say that almost any such straight tubes may be used. In another preferred variation, other Venturi like stratified airflow zones are produced within the restricted confined conformation conduit surrounding a central core-body housing which may contain the unique supercharging combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-75, 82.). Acting as the constriction in the Venturi like configuration creating first a divergent air stream then a supercharge driven stratified Venturi like convergent air compressing apex or vortex zone or zones aft of the constricting center body conformation and forming heated, confined and stabilized combustion zones. Referred to as a Ramjet conformation engine.

The standing differential pressure waves produced within this configuration can be supercharge driven and made to swirl or otherwise spin simply by controlling the angle of convergence of the air pressure differential zones. Many methods of directing this convergent airflow are well understood by those knowledgeable in the art. Veins, blades, flaps, steps, partitions or the asymmetric placement of a restricting centerbody can be used to direct the airflow into an apex, vortex or otherwise stratified conformation and can be made to be variable and that the airflow itself can be made to produce the desired effects. Proper fuel distribution within the zones of high and low-pressure air stratification can act to improve ignition and promote the complete combustion of fuel and oxidizer. In one preferred form (FIG. 10-2, 76, 77) a forward positioned offset peripheral partition wall, perforated by flow directing tubes control co-operatively convection recirculation and Venturi convergent fuel injection intermixing airflow stratified zones.

Whenever the volume of relatively cool intake air exceeds the ability of fuel combustion to raise the volume's temperature enough to be maintained above the kindling or ignition temperature of the fuel and the fuel/air mixture, engine flame out will be experienced. Simply increasing the amount of the cool inducted air supplied to the engine does not automatically allow an indiscriminant increase in the quantity of injected fuel to provide a co-ordinate response in the effective operation of the engine. Or a correspondent increase in the power thrust of the engine and may simply “flood” the engine and shut it down.

By providing for the injection of a discrete amount of a three-dimensional oxidant flow column, a flow column constituting a pre-mixture of an ultra lean incombustible fuel to oxidizer mixture can be produced. (FIG. 7-1, 2, 3, 4, 5) (FIGS. 1, 2 and 3-15) (FIG. 10-75-82) Thereby setting polarized fuel molecules in the path of the shock waves and radiant heat produced by the superheated flame and the products of combustion created by a richer mixture of air and fuel injected downstream of, and/or adjacent to the initial injection site. Maintaining a rich “ignition” mixture convergent toward the point/points of ignition. Assuring stabile ignition quality and producing the average overall stochiometric mixture and heat required to maintain continuous and complete combustion of the fuel and oxidizer mixture, producing more thermal capacity of heat and thrust per unit of expended fuel and less exhausted environmental pollution.

Adequately and efficiently heating the overall volume of air and fuel prior to combustion. Allowing the engines to accept an additional surge of cool, supercharged ultra lean air-fuel mixture by a discreet two-stage fuel and air and (optional) pure oxygen injection procedure. Raising the air/fuel mixture temperatures and densities by convergent compression and the compression of supercharging without inducing flame flash back, preventing flame out and assuring the heat of combustion energy required to complete combustion in the adjacent stratified shear layers. Which in turn further accelerates the flame front toward hypersonic velocities, accelerating the velocity of the whole combustion process and thereby increasing the obtainable acceleration of the aircraft by promoting complete fuel combustion, reduced exhaust temperature and decreasing the exhaust velocity per unit of forward thrust.

Thereby increasing engine performance and efficiency, reducing the required combustor preheating energy component per unit of combustion heating, promoting and producing more forward thrust, reducing exhaust velocity and waste heat per unit of forward thrust, reducing exhaust pollution and avoiding engine flame out. Making possible the means to accommodate the discriminating requirements of the supercharging process in aircraft engines. (Flameout—The loss of the flame front and therefore the loss of combustion pressure differential drive)

Preventing instabilities, hot spot produced NOx and thermal imprint signature, poor thermal distribution, undesirable shock waves, and minimizing total pressure losses. Enabling reductions in the length to diameter ratio of the combustion zone and/or tube of the engine, by reducing heat and friction loss to the walls of the combustion zone or combustor tube. (Friction and heat losses increase with combustor length and additional workload requirements in algorithmic, exponential increments) Internal insulation and the resultant reduction of heat and friction losses to the combustor walls are achieved, do in part to the Venturi effect (and reduced combustor length), through the thermal and friction blanketing by the interceding strata of thin, lower velocity, relatively cool laminent inducted air.

The Venturi effect also automatically controls the differential negative pressure created surrounding the convergent central Venturi dynamic airflow stream. An increase in the central core airflow velocity within the interior of a Venturi like conformation restriction or tube construct automatically produces an increase in the peripheral laminate shear layer's relative negative air-pressure, slowing down it's turbulent velocity. Automatically increasing the efficient acceptance of the additional cool supercharged air into the surrounding strata of convergent airflow rates, fuel induction injection and concomitant intermixing rates and diminishing the stratification of the air stream. Producing an interfusing zone facilitating radiant heating and convection intermixing of fuel and air. Thereby allowing the combustor tube sections or zones to be designed relatively shorter (to achieve an optimum efficient cross-section profile). Making available a precisely controlled low-pressure recirculation (vestibule) zone for fuel and air injection and mixing and radiant preheat and heating of the inducted cool combustion air-fuel mixture (thermal pre-conditioning) (FIG. 1, 2, 3, 7, 10). Benefits of the Venturi and Venturi like effects as applied to the performance of the Ramjet, or Ramjet conformation engine within the modem-unit concept are reliability, simplicity, controlled high combustion efficiency, wide flammability, and high specific thrust performance over a greater range of operation.

The unique combined-cycle engine with a composite series of oppositely rotating, double acting stages of counter-gyration, supercharging fan-jet turbine engine and Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine operating as a unit (FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 12). Having the ability to operate under overload and reduced velocity and in air too thin for the operation of other types of engine combinations (except the pure rocket engine or rocket/ramjet scramjet hybrid complexes). Minus the requirement of rocket engines to carry the considerable weight of the additional oxidant, along with (as required) that of the heavy pressurized oxidant tanks, except for the use of (as required) the free piston engine component. Such Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine modular units carry with them a great potential to transverse the farthest reaches of the stratosphere and the near reaches of space.

The unique combined-cycle, oppositely rotating fan-jet turbine engine supercharging air pump (FIGS. 1, 2, 3.) consists of rotating turbine impeller vane drive and compressor vane type fans fixed radial to a common drive shaft within the engine's housing (FIGS. 4, 5). Separated by a specially designed (inset, offset, parallel, juxtapose vane configuration) free counter-rotating, interfacing, combustion mediating hub (FIGS. 5). Fitted to the drive shaft in a manner that allows the freely rotating combustion mediating hub to rotate, driven in a reverse direction from that of the compressor and drive impellers (FIGS. 4 and 5). (Achieved through the built in transposed symmetry/asymmetry, mirror image of the vane configuration arrangement (FIG. 5). Interacting co-operatively to drive the impeller centrifugal fan type supercharging air pump aspect of the engine. Which in turn furnishes a tangent by-pass stream of supercharged air to the Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine and the bypass air required to cool all the engines and operate the afterburners (FIG. 2). The combined-cycle turbine engine supercharging centrifugal air pump is capable of furnishing these air streams adequately and in opposite directions.

When a design is considered for aircraft engines, some basic parameters are standardized even though they may seem, at first, to be counter intuitive. Set the air speed of the aircraft at three times the speed of sound at altitude, then the velocity of the engine impeller vane tips should not exceed mach 1 (the speed of sound) relative to the airframe of the aircraft. This is due to the established shock wave's usually undesirable disturbances within the confines of the standard combustor configuration. In the standard turbo-jet engine designs, the air being vented off the impeller vane tips of the engines should, usually, not exceed Mach one relative to the velocity of the aircraft and thereby restricts and creates limits inherent to these designs. Nor should engine airflow velocities (internal to the combustor) be allowed to exceed a one half Mach one average flow velocity primarily to restrict shock wave effects. To maintain flame ignition performance, reduce heat and friction, and to prevent destructive shock induced detonation kickback (backfire) and the ejection of the contents of the static combustor along with, perhaps, parts of the engine and to prevent engine “flame out”.

In this invention airflow velocities momentarily approximate zero within the combined-cycle turbine engine's uniquely conformed compressor zone, relative to the velocity of the aircraft! Creating an increase in the rotational velocity limit for the compressor vane travel especially at high altitudes and velocities relative to the apparent closing velocity of the compressor vanes and those of the counter-rotating combustion mediating hub. The vanes are not as subject to the distress of shock events because of counter-harmonic cancellation and interference phenomena that create improved compression instead of the disruptive attributes, do to the convergent effect of the compressor vanes and thereby gaining advantages from shock induced effects. Producing a localized and stabilized ignition point created by the shock induced counter-checking of the air-flow approaching a zero point or zone. Toward which shock induced airflow processes actually accentuate the efficiency of the thermal and compression processes insuring a stabilized zone of compression and the adequate localized heat of ignition. Instead of blowing the ignition and combustion processes out of existence in an attempt at over-boosting engine performance which is an inherent limiting characteristic of standard static combustor design and is all to often realized. Further the placement of these static combustor elements within the engine is not conducive to cooling the peripheral zone of the combustor elements further severely limiting design parameters. (FIG. 11-1) By creating an insufficient method and means of internal heat transfer and a shock induced thermal dislocation of the heat of ignition at the ignition points. Often do to an induced high velocity cold air stream overwhelming and quenching flame propagation and killing the engine. (These speeds are accumulative or additive and relative to each other, the aircraft, the air and the ground) Engines with stationary combustion chamber bulkheads maintain combustor average internal forward velocity values relative to the aircraft's fuselage velocity, and are always fixed one to the other.

In the case of the combined-cycle turbine engine the combustion mediating hub vanes and drive impeller vanes act to absorb the momentum of the forward and lateral thrust velocity vectors of combustion directly. Consequently these forces are converted directly by deflection and thereby more efficiently, into separate lateral rotational vectors as well as forward directed vectors. Converted from what would normally be backward directed lost inertia or friction drag, without the need for intervening static or rotating combustion containment vessels, or other static deflecting, channeling, compressing, flow directing or compacting vanes (FIGS. 11-1 and 2). Static elements placed in the path of a high velocity, high-pressure air stream usually simply create obstructions toward forward impetus or lateral driving processes. Therefore there is advantage in eliminating as many of these obstructive elements as possible. (This basic “Axiom” of design is not meant to be applied to Ramjet engine design, never the less it is well heeded.)

The explosive drive is directed to the counter-rotation of both, the combustion mediating hub vanes and drive impeller vanes without a need for the intervening standard static or rotating combustion chambers thereby increasing impeller drive efficiency, and decreasing space, heat, friction and weight requirements. The combined-cycle turbine engine's counter-rotating combustion mediating hub's inset, parallel, offset, juxtaposed (jut-positioned) vanes (FIG. 5) and the combustion mediating hubs and vanes (FIG. 4), produce an apparent closing velocity that is many times more than the average velocity of the compression gases. This apparent closing velocity achieving more than twice the velocity of compressor vanes in standardized engine designs running at the same rpm. Producing at least twice the compressive efficiency before the average working fluid compression gas flows ever reach Mach one greatly reducing the chance for compressor stall situations to develop. But are capable of velocities well in excess of Mach 1, do to the engine's ability to utilize the constructive capabilities produced by the otherwise usually disruptive shock waves.

The production of an apparent wedging fluid flow indexed velocity which moves diagonally and outward relative to the established closing velocity of the counter rotating compressor impeller vanes and the combustion hub's impeller vanes, greatly exceeds the velocity of the overall fluid flow rate which becomes reduced toward zero. The combustion mediation hub with its vane type flow directing insets focuses these fluid flow rate vectors into fluid compression fields. The compressor and combustion mediation hub vane tip closing velocities high relative rate increases the effective compression rate, thereby building up more of the internalized heat of compression. Efficiently pre-heating and compressing the cool inducted air increasing the intermixing chemical reaction rate, capability and capacity potential, decreasing the chemical reaction time, decreasing the fuel and air mixture's required ignition temperature. Increasing the overall post-combustion expansion and cooling processes and thereby increasing the peak achievable rate and velocity of the combustion reaction and thereby increasing the propulsive potential of the engine.

What is most remarkable is the fact that the velocity of the interacting fluid flow rate is reduced from tangent lateral flow vectors into nearly fixed compressive flow fields. Further the impinging back pressure exerted by the back scattering oppositely (forward) directed explosive shock wave created by the combustion front completely counters (checks) the backward directed incoming compressed air flow. Counteracting the disruptive attributes of these shock waves, converting them into very effective compression, thermal (heat) and flow (checking) directing force vectors. Further reducing the overall volume of air by this means of shock wave compression into nearly fixed field points. The ignition “points” where the volume's temperature and pressure becomes ideal for efficient ignition and combustion expansion processes. Creating a localized zone where fuel and oxygen reach stoichiometry and the flame temperature approaches adiabatic flame temperature. Thereby increasing the efficiency of the reaction by reducing the time required of these processes and gaining localized flame retention stability, a cooler overall operating temperature, with concomitant flameout prevention capability.

The total lateral fluid flow rate approximates zero as the two converging interfacing counter-rotating sets of vanes squeeze and compress the inducted gases into a space convergent toward zero (the “ideal” ignition point) where fuel injection orifices and ignition electrode elements are located. This highly compressed superheated air is “spun out” in the direction of rotation of the combustion-mediating hub, into the equal and opposite rotating drive impeller vanes. Tortured to a near stop. Fuel is injected and ignited within the constricted space created between the combustion hub rim and the interior engine housing (into which fluid flow directing channels have been cut). The flow created by the turbulent interaction of the inertia of the gasses and the heat of friction produced by the velocity of the rotation of the rim of the combustion-mediating hub. Along with the heat and the pressure of the centrifugal compressed gas-flow rate, is successfully checked by the back-scattering pressure of the combustion wave shock front. Creating the stabilized turbulent compressing, heating and mixing conditions and an ideal point into which fuel is injected and intimately mix with the oxidant. Building up these compressive elements within the space allotted between the combustion-mediating hub rim and the engine housing and contribute in algorithmic exponential terms (volumetrically, in cubic measure) to insure a stabilized, highly compressed, superheated zone of combustion.

Through initiated combustion, the process of expansion and the inertia of the gases, driven by the high pressure highly compressed super heated burning gasses of combustion, around and away from the rim of the combustion-mediating hub and into the adjacent, relatively reduced pressure of the combustion field. Created within the space between the after face of the combustor hub vanes and the vanes of the oppositely rotating drive impeller and the engine's internal housing walls. The combustion process continues and further expansion occurs and acts directly upon and drives both sets of the oppositely rotating drive impeller vanes and interfacing combustion-meditation hub vanes.

The ignition electrode points need not be located at precisely “Top dead center” relative to the ideal ignition point. “Timing” of the engine is achieved through a selective axial, longitudinal movement of the combustion-mediating hub relative to the fuel injector orifice jet and the ignition electrode point. This can be done by moving the whole drive shaft and impellers along with the mediating hub arraignment, or through a separate carriage and toggle movable arraignment of the impeller hubs. “Upstream or downstream” and “forward or aft” longitudinally and axial relative to the location of the ignition electrode points and thereby locating “Top dead center”. Defined by the point where the outer diameter of the combustion-mediating hub rim is selectively positioned to be in nearest proximity to the ignition electrodes and inline with the fuel injector orifice jets (FIG. 1-15, 25, 26, 40).

Such positioning of the combustion mediating hub arrangement relative to “Top Dead Center” is used to bring about engine reversal. Rather like creating positive displacement engine backfiring by ignition advancement or retardation relative to top dead center. By moving the drive shaft or toggle carriage arraignment into the “aft” position and thereby moving the combustion mediating hub rim's proximity “aft” relative to the igniter and fuel injection jet ports (FIG. 1-15, 25, 26, 40). Reversing the direction of rotation of the drive impeller by causing combustion to occur “forward” in the compression zone and causing the drive impeller then to act as the compressor impeller and the compressor impeller to act as the driving impeller (FIGS. 4-20 and 27). Thereby driving the compressor impeller (now acting as the drive impeller) in the opposite direction do to the disposition of the relative opposite set angle of the transposed propulsion vanes on the combustion-mediating hub and those of the drive impeller (FIG. 5-26). Likewise the position of the fuel injector orifice jets is such that fuel may be selectively switch transposed into a reversed (counter-rotational direction) fuel injection orifice jet's positional alignment relative to the ignition point. So that even though the impeller rotation direction has been reversed the fuel is always injected upstream of the rotational direction of the rim of the combustion mediation hub, convergent downstream toward the ignition points. (FIGS. 2-15, 25, 39 and 40) The igniters and fuel injectors may be positioned in the compressor zone and selectively turning this zone into the combustion zone reversing the rotation of the engine. (The igniters may be required only during cold starting procedures, at the “ignition” temperature of the fuel; ignition can be induced at the fuel injection ports.) Thereby always driving the combustion mediating hub and drive impellers and the impeller of the compressor stage directly in such a manner as to be thermal and friction liabilities inherent in the construction of the standard static or rotating combustor arraignments. Which are not amiable to the reversal procedure and therefore the need for the added weight, space, expense, and efficiency losses inherent in such designs and not allowing for the reversal characteristic inherent to this engine design configuration.

Further fabricating selective switch transposed compressed oxygen injecting jets upstream and inline with the fuel injector ports and the ignition points, which can then supply additional oxygen to the engine. Furnishing an explosive charge means of starting the turbine engine and boosting and sustaining its operation in overloaded or high altitude circumstances and maintaining a stoichimetric mixture.

An electric starting motor or other auxiliary engine or starting motor and generator arrangement can be attached directly or indirectly to the turbine engine's drive shaft (not shown). Being placed forward of the air intake position, to supply (as necessary) the initial rpm velocity and the required inertial impetus and air compression to begin the operation of the engine and furnish any electrical requirements. The explosive charge detonation rotary-reciprocating drive, of the free piston engine component of the combined-cycle engine being more then adequate to furnish the starting impetus necessary to begin to run the turbine engine aspect of the combined-cycle engine. A synchronized charge of the pressurized oxygen or compressed air and timed electrical spark is required to furnish the initial explosive impetus required to start the free piston and/or to explosively start the turbine engine component.

The combined-cycle turbine-jet engine of claim 1. Being so connected by conducting channeling, and conduit constructions convergent toward the aft section of the central combustion zone ports or dump step arrangements of the apex or vortex stratified Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine within the unit (FIG. 3-38, 61, 64, 65). The J-tube and apex or vortex stratified Ramjet engine, having a central body consisting of the tubular combustor and attached conduit partition, and/or dump step. Operable for converting a surface contact laminate airflow into a three-dimensional flowfield. That includes a substantial turbulent stratified flow defining air column within the combustor interior (FIG. 8).

In one preferred form an airflow defining partition being operable for effecting both an outer circulation zone and a central circulation zone in the combustor. The outer circulation zone being partition stratified around and peripheral to the central circulation zone and being disposed inward of the outer stratified circulation zone. (FIGS. 1 and 8) The fuel being injected first into the central circulation zone and into the core airflow and including a plurality of fuel injectors. For injecting the fuel directly into the airflow by the conformation of a dump step and quarl. Or other Venturi tube convergent effective methods for at least partially mixing the fuel and the oxidizer prior to entering the central core combustion zone. [Hydrogen peroxide and hydrazine may be injected in tandem with, parallel and adjacent to the fuel injection orifices effectively turning the ram jet engine into a rocket engine]. (FIGS. 1, 3, 7 and 8-12, 57, 66, 70).

Further fuel injector and electrical ignition devices are located peripheral to this central core zone to initiate ignition of rich stratified and/or otherwise partitioned air and fuel mixtures (FIGS. 1 and 7-12, 66, 68, 70). Incorporating supercharged convergent combustible air and fuel mixtures into the central core air-column along with the radiant heat of combustion and combustion by products during combustion to thermal condition the inducted pre-combustion air fuel mixtures. A fractional portion being carried up stream, re-circulated by thermal convection and radiation and the positive pressure differential within the combustor to pre-heat tubular combustor injectors.

The tubular combustor injectors, being set into the supercharged induction partition conduit and arraigned to accept a plurality of periphery located fuel injector orifice jets and igniters. Employed to continually ignite inducted and supercharged combustible fuel and oxidizer mixture into the partition produced apex zone forming the Venturi convergent recirculation convection-preheating chamber partition. Arraigned and distributed adjacent to and forming the Venturi convergent combustion zone or chamber (FIG. 1-12, 24).

The turbulent stratified shear layer partitioning the Venturi apex or vortex stratified zone and thereby porting the air and fuel mixture and/or combustion gasses into and adjacent to each of the stratified outer and central circulation zones (FIG. 1-60). Thereby convection pre-heating and heating and accelerating flame propagation into the central core combustion column. Defining thereby a series of supplementary airflow directing vanes and deflecting blades and/or tubular directing combustor ports or tubular “screen” or dump step and quarl fuel injection arrangement. Set convergent and/or lateral toward the aft section of the apex Venturi combustor zone (FIGS. 1 and 8-2, 74). Employed to supply supplementary supercharged conducted heated air and injected fuel into the swirling motion of the central air column forming an apex Venturi like zone and convergent into the combustion tube section and thereby into the expansion zone and exhausted. Adding an increased pressure differential supplemental impetus to the propulsive Venturi stratified central heated air combustion column.

The J-tube or Ramjet engine, wherein the diameter to length ratio may be that of a combustor at 1 to 1 (“the classical square dimension”) or less (FIG. 10-75,84).

A J-tube or Ramjet engine wherein the diameter to length ratio may be that of a combustion tube of up to 1 to 6 (FIG. 10-75).

The J-tube or Ramjet engine wherein the diameter to length ratio may be that of a combustor at about 1 to 2 and is tunable (FIG. 10-75).

The apex or vortex stratified J-tube engine or Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engines. Further comprising an inlet for selectively controlling an amount of air directed from the core supercharging engine to the one or more J-tube engines, Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engines. The conduits for conducting the airflow, also being able to be built into the unit's structure. (FIGS. 1, 3, 8 and 10-75,84,100)

The Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engines or apex or vortex stratified J-tube engines wherein the inlet employs a variable geometry flow control. Using at least one of a hinged or sliding component. A translating component and instrumentation to control the amount of air from the core combination-cycle turbine engine supercharging fan pump and fed, or bled into at least the Ramjet engine conformation. (FIGS. 1, 3, 8, 10-75,84,100)

The Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engines or J-tube and apex or vortex stratified engines, wherein the interconnecting bypass duct intersects the supercharging duct at either an oblique angle or perpendicular to the high pressure supercharging compressor housing and may be part of the unit's construction. (FIGS. 1, 3 and 10-5, 6,38, 52, 59, 64, 75, 84, 100)

The Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine wherein a surface of the aft stem movable culling element, forms a portion of a nozzle of the j-tube engine's exhaust (FIGS. 1, 3, 8 and 10-1, 47). Thereby acting to “nozzle” the expanding exhaust flow, increasing the flow velocity and increasing the pressure differential forward of and toward the exhaust port of the J.tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine. The Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines or J-tube engines wherein a surface of the aft stern movable cowling element forms a portion of an expansion nozzle of the Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine or J-tube engine. When the aft stern moveable element is positioned to at least partially close off the exhaust port of the engines producing an afterburner combustion zone into which bypass air and fuel is injected and ignited. (FIGS. 3 and 10-12, 47, 62, 64, 65, 75, 84, 100)

One preferred variation of the combined-cycle turbine-jet engine or Ramjet engine conformation of claim 1. (FIG. 3-47, 61) Having pressurized oxygen containment vessels (not shown) being connected and made operable to the central turbine-jet supercharging engine's drive shaft containing the centrally located combined-cycle free-piston engine's detonation chamber intake ports and also connected and servicing injected oxygen into the combustion zones of the turbine and Ramjet engines as required.

The combine-cycle turbine-jet supercharging engine also having a similar forward and aft conforming cowling element, serving selectively relevant to and acting thereby as a Ramjet engine conformation variant and to partially close off or nozzle the exhaust ports when not being over-boosted. This element, including a fresh air outermost flow defining means and a fueling means consisting of a plurality of fuel injectors and spark ignition ports placed inward in a radial peripheral distribution to function as the Ramjet engine conformation of the module of claim 1. (FIG. 3, 8-27, 86, 66, 100)

The fuel injectors of the turbine-jet engine are mounted in the interior facing engine wall protruding thereby into flow directing channel ports that have been cut into the wall convergent toward the spark ignition port (FIGS. 1 and 3-86). Functioning in unison to produce combustion and the propulsion supply of supercharged air in conjunction with an aft most buff or water drop shaped ellipsoid centerbody housing producing the required Venturi tube constricting element. Acting directly without any defined combustion chambers.

Containing within this centerbody housing is the combined-cycle turbine-jet supercharging engine functioning as the embodiment of a core engine central to a Ramjet engine conformation (FIG. 3, 10-4, 79, 81, 84, 100). The airflow supercharge defining means being operable for effecting both an outer circulation zone and an inner central recirculation zone of the combustion gases. The outer most peripheral zone, consisting of the heated air bypass circulation zone. (FIGS. 1, 3, 8 and 10-2, 4, 61,64, 75-84) A recirculation zone down stream of a fuel injection dump step and quart (FIGS. 3, 8 and 10-4, 12, 57, 61, 62, 64, 65). The outer most preheated supercharged fresh air circulation zone of the Ramjet conformation. Being toroidal in shape completely surrounding the tear drop ellipsoid and toroidal shaped housing containing the central core combined-cycle turbine-jet supercharging engine and the central combustion zone being disposed inward of the outer fresh air supercharged zone (FIGS. 3 and 10-4, 47, 61, 64, 65, 75,84, 100).

The fueling means, being operable for fueling the outer circulation zone of the peripheral Ramjet conformation of the module, creating combustion of the oxidizer and fuel ignited by the preheated supercharged air, superheated combustion gases and a greater high-pressure differential between these two stratified zones. Thereby producing an improved afterburner for the combined-cycle turbine engine and the Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines. (FIGS. 3 and 10-4, 12, 47, 57, 61, 64, 65, 79, 84)

The exhaust gases need not be expelled near the central shaft and bearings of the jet turbine engine drive, but may be allowed to remain at a peripheral distance from said bearings, journals and shaft. Sparing them from the heat of combustion and keeping the peripheral by-pass cooling air (oxidant) readily available for cooling the engine and for use with the proper fuel injection to act as heated air (oxidant) for the Ramjet and Ramjet conformation engine. Including the centrally located combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine afterburner arrangements. (FIGS. 1 and 3-31, 64)

The combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine may be used independently or together with the Ramjet engine in other applications such as designs for air elevation-suspension and (ground effect) vehicles (FIG. 12-1, 2, 3).

An embodiment of the combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine may be designed as a variant design, to run in one rotational direction with an appropriate change in the combustion-mediating hub and drive vanes.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS - PATENT NUMBERS 2,663,142 1953 Wilson 3,093,962 Gluhareff U.S. Pat. No. 2,710,067 June 1995 Pesaro 60/270X 3,321,911 May 19, 1967 Philpot 60/39.35 3,371,718 May 1968 Myles 3,514,956 1970 Bray 60/39.35 4,006,591 February 1977 Bacon 60/39.35 4,368,619 January 1983 Cervenka 60/39.35 5,372,005 December 1994 Levesque 4,381,692. May 1983 Giles, Jr. 60/39.5 5,660,038 July 1997 Lawler 6,347,507 Stone 216878 June 1993 Kless Pub. No. 2004/0081548 April 2004 Zees et al. Pub. No. US 2005/0081508 A1 Pub. Date: Apr. 21, 2005 Edelman Raymond B. Appl. No. 10/360,168 Feb. 6, 2003 and US 20050081508 R. B. Edelman, et al. Apr. 21, 2005 - also A.A.S.A. Pub. No. 20060254252 Nov. 16, 2006 Rasheed Assigned to G.E. Granted through N.A.S.A. Pub. No. 20070006567 A1 Jan. 11, 2007 Matovich Mitchel 6,910,851 Jun. 28, 2005 Franconi, et al. 6,912,854 Jul. 5, 2005 Inoue, Hitachi et al. 20050016157 Jan. 27, 2005 Okamoto, Osamu et al. 7,134,842 Nov. 14, 2006 Tam, et al.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The ability of aircraft to travel at supersonic velocities puts great demands on the aircraft's propulsion system. Travel at supersonic velocities means an increase in weight of both airplane and fuel at take off and becomes an exponential increase in the power required particularly at zero velocities. To meet such unprecedented demands for lift and thrust propulsion different types and categories of engines and engine cycles used separately or in tandem have been proposed and some have been referred to as combined-cycle engines.

A great amount of power can be made available if an oxidizer is chemically or physically combined with the fuel, or otherwise carried separately, as is the case with rockets. But this must be done judiciously (oxygen weighs many times more than hydrogen adding that weight to the propulsive system) and can lead to mixtures that are very fast acting and explosive, making a potential bomb of the aircraft. This added weight must be overcome, adding inertial liabilities to the operational proficiencies particularly from zero velocity start up through low speed takeoff procedures. Requiring exponentially larger fuel and oxidant requirements over propulsion systems that acquire oxygen from the ambient air and do not have to carry the added weight of the oxidizers as well as carrying the heavy containment tanks. Further the impulse velocity resonance of the rocket combustor is limited by the physical constraints of dimension parameters and efficiency losses at low speed operation. Producing impulse resonance reaction times and burning rates measured in thousands of a second within the combustion reaction cones but achieving exhaust velocities that may reach 21,000 feet per second relative to the rocket at all operational speeds with correspondingly high operating temperatures. Allowing them to realize concomitant equal and opposite reaction response, accumulating very high maximum escape velocities providing they reach the frictionless expansions of space quickly, which they can do. Mandating very abrupt times to reach optimum altitude and velocity causing the rockets to expend all their vast fuel and oxidant reactants in the range of four minutes, more or less. Liquid reactant rockets are complex and expensive and predisposed to malfunction.

Solid propellant rockets although simple are made up of reactants that are usually toxic and polluting and not prone to easy restarting. All aspects of rocketry must be considered before deciding to integrate their propulsive drive into hybrid interaction with the driving potential of the Ram or Scramjet air-breathing engines. When there are more versatile, efficient, high performance alternatives available. That utilizing less overtly explosive hypergolic reactants which are prone to be expensive, tricky to use (sensitive and temperamental), dangerous, poisonous, highly polluting and a very wasteful means of lifting weights into space or near space upper altitudes being loaded down as they are with onboard oxidants.

Solid state rocketry involves highly toxic chemicals that are mixed in stoichiometric proportions. These combustion processes are often referred to as detonation reactions but involve burning processes that create harmonic pulsed surge, measured in hundredths to thousandths of a second. These burning processes produce extraordinarily high exhaust velocities. That in turn produce exponentially wasteful “lost” energy particularly during take-off and during low, heavily laden vehicular operations. They also carry the additional oxidizers that are an added weight burden. These destructive high velocity shock and thermal exhaust processes, when they are vented to the external environs produce thermal and shock related reactions that produce further environment pollutants. They utilize toxic reactants that produce toxic by-products that are not avoidable or reclaimable. The preferred oxidants are usually halogens, sulfuric acid or nitric acid complexes that further act to deplete the ozone layer.

Conventional by-pass turbojet engines with afterburners can be made to function as a “combined-cycle” engine if part of the intake air is shunted around the core by-pass turbojet engine and directed into the afterburner. Then once having obtained transition velocity run as a Ramjet engine by shutting down or shutting off the core by-pass turbojet engine. The by-pass turbojet engine may be run acting to supercharge the Ramjet conformation variation. It is not hard to visualize the two aspects of both engine functions being run simotaniously, aren't they then usually considered a “combined-cycle” turbojet engine or simply a double bypass turbojet engine? Shouldn't this arrangement be referred to simply as a bypass turbojet engine no matter the technique or number of engine bypasses? The ramjet bypass conforming aspect of the engine can be run relatively independent of the core by-pass turbojet engine and it is this characteristic of the engine design that has become referred to as a combined-cycle turbojet engine (FIG. 11).

Referring now to the free piston detonation cycle engine and the unique combination it has within the central drive shaft of the equal and opposite acting supercharging turbine fan-jet engine, as the combined-cycle turbine engine (FIG. 1). (Due to the use of a detonation cycle engine and a combustion cycle engine incorporated to act as one combined engine) When it is used, co-operatively as a supercharger and booster for the unique (selectively reversible) turbine fan-jet engine for novel (optionally reversible) Ramjet engines or the Ramjet conformation engines will be referred to as a unit of such engines. (The free piston aspect of the detonation cycle engine isn't in itself reversible and needs to be shut down upon reversing the turbine engines rotational direction).

It becomes imperative to maximize the operation of the combined-cycle supercharging fan-jet turbine engine and improve the overall performance of the unit, to understand what occurs when this unique supercharging turbine fan-jet engine is run while being “oxygen-boosted” by it's free piston detonation cycle engine component. Operating concurrent with optional by-pass supercharge injecting air and fuel and selectively injecting compressed oxygen into the systems. Allowing the free piston component of the combined-cycle engine to act as an excellent explosive charge-starting engine for the turbine engine component and otherwise boosting its performance. That this distinction becomes even more relevant when one engine cycle is such that it is a cycle of a new type of internal detonation cycle engine. Detonation cycle engines use fuel and pure oxidant mixtures and can function where purely air-aspirated engines cannot (without some sort of rocket assistance) because the velocity or the ambient air pressure and oxygen content are too low. Detonation occurs whenever the gaseous fluid velocity attempts to exceed the speed of sound within the confines of the detonation chamber of the engine allowing for vary rapid speeds of operation.

SUMMARY OF THE WORKINGS AND EMBODIMENTS OF THIS INVENTION

In one preferred form this invention comprises a combination of engine types and categories, referred to as “the unit” for providing propulsive thrust and power. The unit includes compartments, which may also be called pods or modular units, including within them a series of unique engines, at least one being a Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine. A unit contains a unique equal and opposite turbine fan-jet supercharging engine module with a central pure oxidant aspirated free piston engine. This combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine is used to produce thrust and to supercharge the ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine. Producing thrust when the unit has a velocity or air density that is less than that required to operate the Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation aspect of the engine combination.

The Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine, upon reaching a predetermined speed or a transitional velocity of approximately 3 Mach or less (some Ramjet designs develop propulsive thrust at 300 miles an hour or less) then takes over a portion or all of the propulsive thrust of the combined-cycle engine.

The advantage of being able to reverse the thrust of the J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine and/or the turbine engine aspect of the unit cannot be over emphasized. Extreme deceleration to aid in “re-entry” and other types of braking and ultra tight turning, elevating, and evasive maneuvers is made possible and the unit construction offering the strength and movement and/or stability capability necessary to take advantage of this potential has been incorporated into this invention.

The final stage may be the launch of rockets or Ramjet engine pod/modules or other vehicles. Designed to operate individually, in tandem or altogether within the unit concept. Modules can be made to be interchangeable, or exchangeable, or reversible.

The Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine housing includes at least one air inlet to a combustor tube or zone. A supplementary supercharging means and connective conduit situated around this tube or zone that creates a space, fore and aft, around the combustion chamber section of this tube and a second inlet disposed laterally and tangentially into the combustion section. This space may constitute an apex and/or vortex vestibule section or zone and may act as combustion and/or pre-combustion Venturi like reduced air pressure and increased air velocity recirculation zone (FIG. 1).

A combustion zone consisting of an annular internal section of the engine-housing wall furnished with central fuel injection and ignition flow directing channels (FIG. 1) or a dump step and quarl injector and at least one inlet port and one exhaust port and nozzle. This circumference (peripheral) circularly conduit may be part of the connecting structure of the unit, as for instance, a pod or part of a wing structure and includes an inlet housing that opens into the housing of the supercharging section of the unit (FIGS. 1 and 3).

In a preferred variation (FIG. 3) air-conducting conduits conformed in and around the supercharging engine housing that converges tangentially and is situated so as to produce a convergent apex and/or vortex flow effect toward the inlet port/ports to the combustion zone. Which may be accentuated with the use of angle deflecting or directing tubes, vanes, blades, gates, ports, steps, partitions or other such stationary or moveable elements. The air inlet housing is coupled to the combustor inlet or inlet zone and defines a hollow interior volume (that may house the supercharging combined-cycle turbine-jet engine) intersecting tangentially and convergent toward the after combustor zone. Defining an apex or vestibule like conformation and which may or may not define a vortex configuration. Defining a pre-heating recirculation zone and a fuel injection and ignition partition, or a partition perforated by a plurality of tubes and acting as conduit, or combustor jets porting into the central core tube combustion zone and into the afterburner section.

The oxidizer (air) flow velocity is increased through these constrictions into low-pressure peripheral; high-pressure central stratified zones conforming within and around the combustor tube or combustion zone. Relatively slowing down the mean average overall fluid flow rate in these stratified zones, while nozzle constricting and increasing the velocity of the central strata and/or core airflow velocity. Fuel is injected into the reduced pressure zones or column, ignited and combusted and explosively expanded outward and inward of the after section apex or vortex zone of the core center-body and into the hollow tubular expansion housing, to be exhausted through the exhaust nozzle port.

In another preferred variation (FIG. 3) the first portion of the airflow intake column forms a central circulation column to supply the requirements of the core turbine engine. The second column of divergent bypass airflow is supercharged over, around and conforming to the central supercharging engine housing and ducting forming an apex or vortex combustion zone. Ported to form an outer stratified layer of airflow in between the constrictions formed in the Ramjet's combustion tube or within the constriction conformation of the Ramjet conformation engine. Creating a low pressure peripheral Venturi or Venturi like zone into which fuel is injected and inducted into the central high velocity air column, ignited, combusted, and exhausted. The second air column is driven by the central core supercharging engine attached to and forming the peripheral ramjet engine's inlet conduit housing.

In another preferred (FIGS. 1, 3 and 10-75, 76, 77, 80) form the turbulence of the combustion process create a pressure differential. Defined as an intense pressure front moving through the combustor zone of the ramjet engine at or in excess of the speed of sound and reverberates relative to the interior of the combustion chamber in hundred thousandths of a second. Registering this reflected Hertzian spectra as a recirculation combustion zone pushing against the incorporated forward bulkheads. It is because of this turbulent repercussive mode of sonic behavior that these engines are referred to as impulse ramjet engines and it is through these harmonic surges that added impetus and thrust is obtainable.

The designs of this invention (FIGS. 1 and 10-75, 76, 77) include bulkheads in the housings forward of the combustion zone adding structural elements and/or zones that absorb forward directed pressure more efficiently than may be achieved in engines without such constructs. Furthermore these bulkheads can be made moveable and act as an echo focusing means by creating standing sound waves (perpendicular shock waves) forming zones of compression-decompression stratification. Creating relatively stable standing wave zones into the turbulent stratified circulation, recirculation and repercussion processes facilitating fuel and oxidant injection and ignition. Producing explosive combustion processes, repercussion and counter-harmonic suppression response, momentarily stabilizing and localizing the flame front and maintaining combustion between supersonic and hypersonic surge spikes and impulses, counter-harmonic muffling silencing the sonic aspects of these interactions.

The unit has a preferred supercharging engine (FIGS. 1 and 3), which includes the combined-cycle fan turbine-jet engine of particular specifications and invention.

The present invention provides a gas turbine combustor (FIGS. 1 and 3) having a prescribed series of interactive combustion zones. (Rather than the standard static or rotating combustion chambers of the present state of the art turbine designs) Forming high pressure, low pressure stratified zones into which fuel and air is supplied. Wherein the fuel is supplied into the combustion zones as a plurality of coaxial fuel injector jets in proximity to an equal number of spark or glow ignition plugs.

Comprising a turbine housing case including a transposable translating high-pressure turbine section and a low-pressure turbine section (FIGS. 1 and 3-4).

A supercharging pump fan impeller case housing and by-pass conduit ducting disposed around at least a portion of the turbine case housing and spaced apart to form a bypass flow passage (FIGS. 1 and 3-4, 5, 38, 52).

A central hollow drive shaft-cylinder that houses the free piston detonation portion of the combined-cycle engine (FIG. 1-41).

A catering injection system to furnish and synchronize, electrical spark, fuel and oxidant to the engine components of the combined-cycle engine (FIG. 9-28).

A continuous flow fuel injection system having nozzles placed upstream and downstream or clockwise and counter-clockwise relative to the rotational direction of the combustion mediating hub, relative to the engine housing and in line with the sparkplugs. The heated compressed air from the compressor section may be maintained above the ignition temperature (flash point) of the oxidizer and fuel mixture. The spark plugs maybe necessary only to insure ignition of the fuel and air mixture during cold engine starting and when the unit is in a multi-fuel mode of operation (FIG. 3-15, 25 39).

A means of moving the combustion mediating hub co-operatively with the drive and compressor impellers forward or backward by moving the central drive shaft or by a spline and toggle carriage moved by a toggle extension (FIG. 2-23, 38) longitudinally along the drive shaft. By moving the compressor and drive impellers and rotary combustion mediating wheel longitudinally forward or aft of the centerline of the fuel injection ports and spark plug deportment ports determines the combustion driving direction and relative ignition “timing”. Moving the whole impeller hub arrangement forward, of the spark igniter position, the engine revolves in the forward-determined direction. Likewise by moving the arraignment backward of the igniters, a reverse rotation direction is produced. Acting much as if the system were made to backfire sending it into reverse.

A reverse (transposed) twisting channeled screw arraignment, free piston assembly (FIG. 6). The central portion of the piston being slotted, grooved polyhedral or oval in cross section rather than the round cross section that makes up the remainder of the shank of the piston. A cylinder-drive shaft assembly that has a matching internal cross section made to except the external piston cross section configuration, central to the turbine housing (FIG. 4).

A valve assembly mounted in the engine. The valve assembly including a valve inlet, outlet, port arrangement having at least a fluid inlet in fluid communication with a bypass flow passage (FIG. 9-44, 45, 85).

A first fluid (gases of detonation) exhaust outlet port in fluid communication with the low-pressure exhaust port and nozzle of the turbine engine (FIG. 48).

A second set of outlet exhaust ports in fluid communication with the exhaust porting means of the turbine engine. Where, in a preferred arraignment, the free piston acts also as a valve. As such the drive shaft-cylinder becomes the valve body. Selectively moveable between an open and a closed position, in which only the first fluid outlet port from the high-pressure fuel pump is in substantial fluid communication with the fluid inlet port built into the cylinder and sleeve. Thereby designed to supply an explosive charge of fuel and oxidizer mixture into the detonation chamber. Also having within the cylinder and sleeve an open position, in which the second fluid outlet ports are open to the internal spiraling exhaust ducting system built into the piston and co-operatively leading to the exterior exhaust ports (FIG. 9-3, 48, 63, 72, 73).

Thereby causing a spiraling helical rotational response to the expanding channeled exiting exhausting gasses to be transmitted to the reciprocal motion of the piston, which is directly co-operatively transferred to the cylinder-driveshaft arraignment thereby also driving the rotating turbine mechanism of the turbine engine. This reciprocal-rotating arraignment incorporating a two cycle internal combustion engine method of intake and exhaust porting, utilizing the driving piston and cylinder as a method of incorporating an intake (fuel and oxidant) and exhaust gas valve system.

In one preferred method utilizing a positively displaced injection catering carriage, fuel and oxidant is injected through the intake port of the engine's detonation chamber and detonated, displacing the piston and that of the fuel and oxidant injector carriage, opening the exhaust port and exhausting the exhaust gasses. Thereby the other end of the piston is displaced into position and fuel and oxidant are injected within the opposite detonation chamber, acted upon by detonation to drive the other end of the piston and that of the fuel and oxidant injector carriage back to assume a pre-detonation status. Preparing the fuel and oxidant for injection, injecting and simotaniously relieving the exhaust, bringing about detonation and repeating the cycle (FIG. 9-43).

The internal lubrication for the turbine bearings is utilized to cool the detonation chambers of the detonation free-piston engine (FIG. 9-43, 50). Although detonation type chemical reactions are considered cold chemical reactions (because they produce more relative “work” compared to the “heat” of combustion of the combustion type reactions) the heat of these reactions remains considerable.

The detonation engine's cycle involves the use of these responsive high explosive detonation reactions. Where upon the oxidant must intermix with the fuel only microseconds prior to detonation (to keep them separate and non-explosive), The systems of fuel and oxidant remains separated at all other times within the system to prevent any chance of “flash back” explosions. Fortunately this is accomplished in a simple and straightforward manner using the explosive reaction of detonation to drive solid high speed catering methods of injection that are both self-limiting and transposition checking (FIG. 9-7, 11, 28, 73).

The free-piston of the engine being channeled within the confinement of the cylinder so as not to allow any revolving movement except that which is communicated to the revolving cylinder-drive shaft wall. That acts as a piston-valve assembly mounted within the cylinder. The piston interacting cooperatively with the communicating cylinder exhaust and inlet porting of the engine and in fluid communication with the engine's fuel and oxidant injector catering system and bypass flow passage (FIG. 9). fast and efficiently. Such attributes, made obtainable by this invention, allow for and encourage the research into new materials. . (Nanotube carbon matrix and carbonized epoxy laminates or tungsten carbide complex materials with diamonized or graphite ceramic high heat and impact surfaces.)

Both the free piston and slave injector and electric spark catering systems are kept in synchronization by controlling the ignition and detonating timing. The rate of detonation responding to and being controlled by controlling the quantity of injected oxidant and fuel. Electric sensing by magnetic position location and computing devises (not shown) track the relative positions of the catering carriage injector values to that of the piston, although the harmonic response shared relationship is self-regulating. Contact switch or electric circuit interrupting methods (not shown) can achieve ignition timing. Utilizing a computerized method (not shown) to fine tune advancement or retarding processing and the quantity of oxidant and fuel requirements to facilitate optimum engine performance.

In the closed valve position no fuel and oxidizer outlet port is in substantial fluid communication with the fluid inlet port to supply fuel and oxidizer to the detonation chamber of the engine. In the open position the detonation chamber inlet valve is open only to the interceding catering injector body. Simotaniously ignition is initiated activating the responsive reciprocating valve injector catering arrangement directly, actuating the opening and closing of the input ports metering and then injecting the fuel and oxidant (FIG. 9-28, 44, 45). Or being so disposed as to create a equal and opposite (transposed) opening and closing of the fuel and oxidant supply ports injecting the reactants into the opposite detonation chamber. Keeping the catering carriage in the way of and interceding between the injection ports and the detonation chambers thereby checking any flash back possibility.

Alternately injecting the reactants directly or indirectly into the detonation chambers at the opposite end of the cylinder, closing by intercession those valve-input ports to prevent a flash back into those mixing and detonation chambers and visa versa. Whereby ignition in the opposite detonation chamber commence, producing detonation, returning the free piston and corresponding slave injector catering and valve arrangement to their starting positions and thereby continuing the cycle. The whole operation of intermixing or premixing and injection can be reduced to only one injector plunger for each detonation chamber.

A spring, solenoid, pneumatic, hydraulic, or mechanical means of operation can be utilized along with a synchronized “inline” high-pressure fuel and oxidant pump (not shown), to the drive the injector catering apparatus. The pressure from the explosion and that of the pressurized fuel and oxidizer, liquid or gaseous, can be utilize so that these sources of high pressure can activate the injector pump operation, a separate pump may be employed to insure filling fluid flow volumetric velocities and bypass return (not shown). After delivering its charge the injector plunger catering end is left open to the detonation process. Allowing it to be in position to harness the energy of the explosion to rebound the valve, plunger injector catering carriage mechanism back into recycling (reloading-recharging) position much like the action of the bolt action carriage in an automatic rifle (FIG. 9-28, 50).

The inlet and outlet port valves may be cut into the cylinder shaft wall much as those in the cylinder-piston valve arrangement common to the two-cycle internal combustion engine. Therein allowing the exhaust outlet valve timing to be controlled by the reciprocation rate of the free piston in the cylinder, relieving the exhaust only when the exhaust port has been opened by the passage of the piston. Allowing the reacting input injector valve catering carriage to act by intercession as a flash back barrier, keeping the input ports closed until the processes of drive and exhaust are completed and only then opening the imports to supply the reactants to the mixing and detonation chambers. Thereby simplifying, strengthening and speeding up the fuel-oxidant catering and injection process (FIG. 9-28, 44, 45, 50).

The free piston engine has a very forgiving timing arrangement in that it dose not revolve around top dead center but unlike a crankshaft timed engine, the time the piston has to remain stopped at “top dead center” is relatively variable. In the compressed state of the impact inertia field of the free piston, the mixed fuel and oxidant has its “own time” to bring about the processes of detonation with a supportive electric spark charge. This in turn makes the reaction faster (more spontaneous), more complete and more efficient. Never the less there has to be a built in shock absorber built into the piston screw faces.

Never the less there has to be a built in shock absorber. Even though the expanding gases create a detonation shock wave. It becomes “crushed and tortured out of existence” or smothered by the relatively slow reaction time of the piston. It is this smothering or muffling effect (that is in part do to the tortured venting inherent in the piston screw face designs) upon the hypersonic detonation waves that act to silence the destructive aspect of these processes and effect efficient high velocity operation. Because of the screw like piston's “flow restriction” shape, fluted, beveled, spin direction channeling, the high velocity exhaust gases act as it's own muffler like built in shock absorber (FIG. 6-72).

Further it is through the convoluted spiraling screw channel course provided the exhaust by the free piston porting means and through which the expanding exhaust gasses must transverse that act to force the free pistons reciprocating and rotating spin orientated driving response. Do to the acute angles of the faces of the piston and the conical space allotted the detonation chambers; the almost square area of the highly compressed explosive mixture, the displacement by detonation is calculate as cubic volume in expediential proportions. Fortunately the realized volume representing displacement and thereby representing work done by the expanding gasses of detonation, is able to be relieved in likewise expediential (cubic) proportions (FIG. 6-86).

High altitude supercharging of ambient air into the Venturi induced low-pressure laminate air/fuel mixing zone of these ramjet tube engines increases their operational range do to reduced external air friction losses and increased internal to external pressure differential. Providing the maintenance of an airflow mass inertial velocity within the ramjet combustion tube where its associated forward response pressure differential is the only means of propelling it. When at the same altitude the non-supercharged ramjet-tube engines become inoperable.

In the case of the supercharged ramjet-tube engine dynamics the tube efficiencies increase when the mass-flow velocity increases do to the algorithmic increase in the internal inverse pressure differential ratio relative to altitude. The greater the altitude the less the ambient external air pressure and corresponding external friction loss and the associated correspondingly greater relative internal working pressure. While the relative internal pressure and explosive combustion velocity gradient goes up the negative pressure within the Venturi conformation is momentarily checked by the back-scattering effect created by the same explosive drive (the reason these engines are often referred to as impulse engines).

Effectively stopping the gas flow through the combustor, then correspondingly the fluid flow is increased by the increased Ramming impetus of the forward driving component of the explosion acting to increase the forward drive of the engine. This increased surge produces a reconstruction of the Venturi convergent stratified phenomena reducing internal friction and heat losses to the conformational combustion tube walls confining heating to the central core laminate of the Venturi and the inefficiencies go down and efficiencies go up. Reducing internal and external friction losses at high altitudes and increasing the Venturi central core air stream velocity, increasing the Venturi conformation efficiencies and thereby increasing the equal and opposite forward inertial driving response. This high velocity convergent air stream velocity quickly drops toward zero upon exhaust divergence processes and may need an exhaust nozzle means of internal gas flow velocity adjustment.

In the high upper atmosphere the air becomes so thin that the ramjet combustion processes cannot function, and we add supercharging processes. We end up adding less than twice the weight in fuel and/or oxidant for more than twice the work (range and speed) at greater velocities do to increases in efficiency, by continuing to operate at very high altitudes. Further more “an increase in efficiency can be attributed to up to a 90 to 99 percent stoichiometeric exhaust.” * (Edelman)

This result is do to the stratified fuel and airflow turbulence creating a more controlled intimate mixture of air and fuel allowing a richer more ignitable mixture at the points of ignition while retaining complete overall combustion. Too many centrifugal swirls added to the air stream and not enough turbulence and the stratified layers of air and fuel are not easily mixed. In prior art technology, a diffusion combustion system can have a problem of high level Nox. Premix combustion systems also has problems of combustion stability, such as flash back, and flame stabilization during the start up and partial or overloaded operation. In actual operation it is preferable to simultaneously solve these problems.

It takes a great deal of work and time for the fuel to cut through the 80% nitrogen of ambient air to bring the fuel and oxygen together and demands attention in understanding and improving ambient air engine design. Whereby as an example, the torturing of the airflow and fuel between the outer rim of the combustion mediating hub and the engine housing interior wall of the counter rotating turbine engine provides the required power, turbulence, and ideally located arraignment, relative to the realized ideal ignition points. To effectively compress, heat, inject and ignite the fuel and air mixture. With too much heat and pressure the nitrogen in the air reacts with oxygen and creates NOx, not enough heat and pressure or too stratified the layers of air and fuel and therefore too rich or too lean a mixture of fuel and air and there is incomplete combustion.

The Venturi phenomena promote and mediate the stratification effect. Furthermore do to the Venturi effect the friction and heat losses to the j-tube combustor walls are reduced. The combustor j-tube walls may be perforated to facilitate cooling. These losses go up by more than a square dimension (algorithmic) as the combustor length to width ratio is increased. A one to one or square dimension is considered the “classic” length to width ratio of Venturi tubes (FIGS. 1 and 10-61, 62). Efficiency is attributed as being inversely proportional to the velocity of the residual expanding exhaust and the exhaust velocity should, ideally become reduced toward zero relative to that of the ambient air. With little to no exhaust jetting, although we know why we call these engines Ramjets, they jet and they have become notorious for their sonic booms.

Reducing average internal flow rate velocities by the more efficient conversion of external velocity flow vectors into internal fluid gas convergent compression fields. Increasing the overall pressure differentials and subsequent drive efficiencies, reduce the residual exhaust velocities and increase forward propulsion and overall performance. Stratified swirling turbulent air within the combustion zone and the premixing chambers need to be tuned so that the dense fuel rich compression wave zones reach a spike or peak at the points of ignition and still reach stoicheometeric conditions at the exhaust. (Without unburned hydrocarbons or NOx) There is provision for the proper tuning of these chambers and zones and for adjusting the lengths of the combustion chambers of the j-tubes (FIG. 10-75, 77, and 78). Proper tuning of the j-tubes also helps silence them.

In another preferred aspect of the formulations of claims 1 and 2 consider the combined-cycle supercharging fan-jet turbine engine as an integrated part of the unit concept. Within the turbine there is a central drive shaft-cylinder containing the oxygen charged percussion-detonation driven free-piston component of the combined-cycle engine complex. (FIG. 9-44, 71,72).

The functioning of the turbine component of these engine complexes is the realization of the benefits derived from the counter rotating interfacing turbine vane arrangement besides reversibility. The fact that the very high apparent closing velocity of the counter rotating turbine blades means that the speed at the apex of the interfacing blades becomes that of a diagonal cross section as it moves outward. Thereby the speed of sound preceding ignition (a desirable characteristic in these engines) can be obtained directly and at less revolutions of each set of the interfacing oppositely rotating compressor vanes compared to those of standard turbojet engine designs. (FIG. 11) A shock wave is created and moves relative to the converging apex outward toward the ignition points. Thereby causing a micro-sonic boom to echo off the peripheral engine-casing walls, inward then against the outward centrifugal driven compression gases further shock compressing them into a stabilized zone into which fuel is injected and focused convergent toward the ignition points.

The convergence of these elements creates a stabilized point of greater pressure and temperature where the sonic echo is focused toward the points of ignition. Thereby converting much of the disruptive attributes of supersonic air shock wave and flow velocity effects into desirable processes further increasing the compression of the shocked and nearly stopped, impinged and highly tortured, superheated localized air stream creating a corresponding ignition point stabilization and enhanced flame-front propagation.

Creating ideal points for the fuel injection of rich stratified fuel air mixtures convergent to spike toward these points. These rich mixture strata enhances ignition do to the lower ignition temperature of the richer mixture, averaging a lower temperature of combustion while providing the overall heat of combustion required to insure the combustion of the adjacent leaner fuel air strata. These attributes then constitute the means of improved ignition and combustion performance by lowering the “heat of ignition” requirements and at the same time producing a higher internal pressure differential at overall lower operating temperatures. Thereby aiding in the elimination of “hot spots” and the associated NOx, assuring more complete combustion and the correspondent forward propulsion momentum at a reduced exhaust flow velocity and detectable heat signature (signal) at the exhaust port.

These attributes and characteristics acting as a unit and in concert constitute the unique combined-cycle engine supplemental supercharging of the Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines of claim one and two. Offering, from the matching of these complimentary engines and cycling processes, a vista of efficient far-ranging highflying new accomplishments in engine design and development. The supercharged ramjet engine can begin operation at from 300 to 400 miles an hour or less to the operational range of the Brayton or Okamoto cycle rocket/ramjet hybrid engines and the scramjet at 9.6 Mach while obtaining greater range of operation and velocity when operating at high altitudes. Quite operation (the noise is smothered and muffled out of existence by counter-harmonic suppression inside the engines), greater performance and range, optional reversibility, marked by a cleaner cooler exhaust becomes the hallmark of the efficiency and applicability of the unit combined-engine concept.

It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiments of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of this invention.

DRAWINGS AND BRIEF DESCRIPTION

Additional advantages and features of the present invention become apparent from the description and the claims, taken in conjunction with the drawing.

FIG. 1 transparent side profile view of one preferred unit of engine configurations in accordance with the teachings of the present invention.

FIG. 2 is an exploded illustration of the unit of engines and mechanisms of FIG. 1.

-   2-1 is a variable ramjet engine expansion exhaust cowling. -   2-2 is a flow-directing conduit and pre-chamber into the ramjet     engine combustion tube. -   2-3 is the turbine engine tubular drive shaft and free piston engine     cylinder. -   2-4 is the turbine engine-housing wall. -   2-5 is the supercharger centrifugal pump cowling and conduit. -   2-6 is a supercharger impeller pump fan vane or blade. -   2-7 is the free piston engine detonation chamber. -   2-8 is a keyway cut into the piston shank and cylinder-drive shaft     to provide lateral spiral rotational movement of the free piston     with the concomitant rotation of the shaft-cylinder. (in place of     the polyhedron or oval cross-section) -   2-9 is the impeller hub spline carriage toggle linkage. -   2-10 is a column bearing supporting brace and airflow directing     vane. -   2-11 is the lubrication-input tubing. -   2-12 is a fuel-input tube for the ramjet engine. -   2-13 is the impeller hub spline carriage. -   2-14 is a step produced by the end of the engine housing. -   2-15 is an oxygen injector input tube . -   2-16 is a fuel-input tube for the ramjet engine. -   2-17 is the fuel injector and igniter brace. -   2-18 is a convergent supercharged air induction combustor port. -   2-19 is an electrical terminal wire. -   2-20 is the compressor impeller. -   2-21 is a combustion chamber cover. -   2-22 is a variable geometry air intake cowling. -   2-23 is an impeller carriage toggle linkage. -   2-24 is a glow plug or spark plug for the ramjet engine. -   2-25 is a glow plug or spark plug for the turbine engine. -   2-26 is the combustion mediating impeller hub. -   2-27 is the drive impeller. -   2-28 is the fuel and oxidant injector carriage. -   2-29 is the injector covering. -   2-30 is one of the main drive shaft bearings -   2-31 is another main bearing -   2-32 is the lubrication trace and bearing retainer for the     combustion mediating impeller hub. -   2-33 is the bearing for the combustion mediating impeller hub. -   2-34 is the injector hosing cover. -   2-35 is the ramjet engine variable geometry air intake cowling. -   2-36 is the ramjet engine spark plug igniter -   2-37 is the ramjet engine fuel injector port connector. -   2-38 is the impeller carriage. -   2-39 is the turbine engine oxygen injector port connector. -   2-40 is the turbine engine fuel injector. -   2-41 is the turbine engine drive shaft and free piston engine     cylinder. -   2-42 is the spline line machined into the drive shaft hosing. -   2-43 is the insulated fuel injector hosing and supporting brace. -   2-44 is the oxygen catering injector-input connector. -   2-45 is the fuel catering injector input connector -   2-46 is a supporting brace and flow-directing vane. -   2-47 is the variable geometry exhaust expansion cowling -   2-48 is the free piston engine exhaust port. -   2-49 is a free piston engine spark plug igniter. -   2-50 lubrication output tubing. -   2-51 ramjet engine igniter electrodes. -   2-52 turbine engine supercharger air bypass conduit connection. -   2-52 [a] bypass supercharged air conduit check valve slide     mechanism. -   2-53 turbine engine bypass air cooling port. -   2-54 shown in FIG. 3 is a liquid coolant and lubricant tube     connector. -   3-55 conformation turbine engine lubricant and coolant fluid o-ring     seals shown in FIG. 3. -   3-56 conformation engine bearing brace support shown in FIG. 3. -   3-57 conformation ram jet engine peripheral fuel injection     distributive system shown in FIG. 3 -   2-58 turbine engine bearing lubrication port. -   2-59 ramjet engine air compartment conduit cowling. -   2-60 ramjet compartment bulkhead and containment partitioning wall. -   2-61 ramjet combustion tube. -   2-62 dump step vestibule apex combustion (afterburner) chamber. -   2-63 screw fluted detonation piston. -   2 and 3-64 bypass air ducting for engine cooling and charging the     conformation engine afterburner Apex zone. -   3-65 bypass air ducting for engine cooling and charging the ramjet     engine conformation component. -   3-85 is a combustion-directing channel cut into the turbine engine     wall.

FIG. 3 is a centerline, cutaway sectional perspective view of the embodiment of a preferred version of the ramjet conformation configuration engine unit sharing all the numbered parts with FIG. 2 or as duly noted and numbered.

FIG. 4 is a longitudinal centerline view of the turbine engine compression and drive impellers and drive shaft numbered according to FIG. 2.

FIG. 5 is a perspective view of the combustion mediating impeller hub numbered according to FIG. 2.

FIG. 6 is a perspective, cutaway 3-dimential, centerline longitudinal, cross-section view of the free piston configuration.

-   6-71 is the cutaway perspective, longitudinal centerline hexagon,     and cross-section view of the polyhedron portion of the free-piston     shank. -   6-72 illustrates two preferred variations of transposed (reversed)     helical screw exhaust channeling configurations of the free-piston. -   6-86 denotes the angle of the pressure relief slope cut into the     face or “firing deck” of screw bit like configuration of the free     piston of the detonation cycle engine. -   6-90, 91 is a profile view of the free-piston's detonation     combustion containment ring and land.

FIG. 7 is a transparent profile view of a preferred version of an air or pure oxygen and fuel igniter and “torch” arrangement.

-   7-66 is the preferred igniter sparking mechanism. (an example is the     Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo, Ohio) Those skilled in the art will     appreciate that other types of igniters may be used, such as glow     plugs, plasma jet igniters, microwave and laser ignition devices and     are commercially available.

FIG. 8 is a partial transparent profile view of another preferred variant unit embodiment of a vortex ramjet engine component of the unit complex.

FIG. 9 is a perspective, cutaway perspective; longitudinal centerline sectioned view of the detonation chamber head and arraignment of some of the interior components.

FIG. 10 is a number of schematic type diagrams depicting alternative engine conformations, designed in accordance with the teachings and embodiments of the present invention.

-   10-75 schematic drawing of a variation embodiment of an apex ramjet     engine component of the combined-cycle engine unit. Illustrating two     selective positions in the combustion tube length producing a     supercharged dynamic airflow velocity amplification by the selective     “tuning” of the combustion tube variable length within the vestibule     apex zone of the ramjet engine. -   10-76 schematic drawing of another embodiment variant of an apex     ramjet engine component of the combined-cycle engine unit     illustrating a three-stage (Venturi induction amplification) airflow     rate supercharging dynamic conformation. -   10-77 schematic drawing of the embodiment of a two-staged variant     “Venturi amplification” airflow rate supercharging dynamic apex     ramjet engine conformation. -   10-78 schematic drawing of the embodiment of two offset apex ramjet     engines combined together with one combined-cycle supercharging     fan-jet turbine engine and may be designed to accommodate the     addition of more. -   10-79 schematic drawing of the embodiment of the combined cycle     supercharging fan-jet turbine engine and conformation ramjet engine     combination. -   10-80 schematic drawing of the embodiment of a dump step mediated     supercharged (Venturi induction amplified) airflow dynamic ramjet     engine component of the combined-cycle engine unit complex. -   10-81 schematic drawing of the embodiment of a symmetrically     reversible combined-cycle turbine ramjet engine-conformation engine     complex. -   10-82 schematic drawing of the embodiment of a symmetrically     reversible dump step (Venturi induction amplified) apex     combined-cycle turbine ramjet engine arrangement. -   10-83 schematic drawing of the embodiment of a symmetrically     reversible (Venturi induction) combustion tube ramjet combined-cycle     engine complex. -   10-84 schematic drawing of the embodiment of supercharge augmented     ramjet conformation combined-cycle fan-jet turbine engine     combination.

FIG. 11 a schematic drawing of the embodiment of a standard state of the art of a “combined-cycle” bypass turbo-jet engine ramjet conformation engine as proposed by—Pub. No. US 2005/0081508 A1 Pub. Date: Apr. 21, 2005 Edelman Raymond B. appl. Ser. No. 10/360,168 Feb.

-   11-1 combustion chamber vessels and arraignments. -   11-2 airflow directing veins.

FIG. 12 schematic like stylized drawings in accordance with the teaching of the present invention represent particular examples and portions thereof and may be configured in any manner as to package the engines referred to into a particular application. Then as such changed to suit the specific needs of a given application.

-   12-1 stylized profile drawing view of a space shuttle rocket vehicle     being boost assisted to launching altitude. -   12-1 [a] by the embodiment carriage assisting vehicle. Illustrating     an application of the combined engine concept that utilizes the     engine units attached to the wing and body housing of an aircraft     carriage fuselage arraignment assisting in a proposed space shuttle     launching method. -   12-2 is a stylized profile drawing illustration of the three engine     units depicting the embodiment of a “wingless” aircraft with     variable forward and aft air intake and exhaust vertical and     horizontal engine alignment and stabilizing elements. Coupled to the     combined-cycle engine and apex ramjet engine juxtaposition employed     to selectively control the intake and exhaust of air and gasses     vertically and horizontally to achieve lift and control yaw, pitch     and roll in aerial maneuvers. With a separate unit of the     conformation ramjet/combined-cycle engine complex placed     longitudinal to the aircraft's airframe and angle of attack     producing forward thrust aiding in sustained forward flight. -   12-3 A variation of the basic profile view of an aircraft as     depicted in view (FIG. 12-1) with a conformation ramjet     combined-cycle engine unit complex placed amidships with airflow     directed vertically to provide lift. With an apex ramjet     combined-cycle turbine engine unit complex placed aft and     longitudinal to the airframe and angle of attack providing the     forward thrust to sustain forward flight.

Whenever the air speed reaches a predetermined ramjet velocity the forward and aft variable culling airflow control foils are positioned in position 1 of FIG. 8 and are alternately positioned outward to position 2 of FIG. 8 at a predetermined velocity and altitude. Airflow entering the Ramjet engines is subject to compression and acceleration to super-sonic speeds and increased pressure into a stratified flow zone of high and low pressure into which fuel is injected and ignited. Supplemental air and fuel is injected and do to the temperature and pressure of the compression and spark from the igniters, ignition is maintained. Supercharged air from the supercharging engine/engines of FIG. 1 at a predetermined velocity is shunted into the ramjets. This compressed supercharged air is equal in volume to approximately twice that of the standard volumes per pound of air pressure forced into the combustion chambers of the standard Ramjet and fan-jet engines. Without twice the added weight and space requirement and subsequent inefficiency and loss of performance of present engine designs.

Do to the elimination of the standard combustion chambers and/or combustors, the stratified air flow compression fields created within the combustion zone of the engines is greatly increased with reduced disruptive airflow turbulence. Reduced overall internal temperature and greater pressure differentials provide high performance significantly reducing the weight and size of the engines compared to other known engine design. It also reduces the hot section length within the combustion tubes and zones of the ramjet engines thus reducing cooling requirements.

Unique lip spike translators are deployed on the forward isentropic cone angle of the forward cowling to control the shock wave disruption on lip condition during supersonic flight. (Not shown)

The supercharged augmented ramjet combined-cycle engine combination allows compact engine packaging to reduce the weight and size of the engine systems. Achieving all these aforementioned capabilities with only two basic moving parts.

The density of the atmosphere and the velocity the aircraft is designed to travel in dictates the maximum and minimum length and opening angle of the air inlet veritable geometry forward cowling and the rpm the supercharging engine must be run at. 

1. A unit or modular units of unique aircraft engines for producing propulsive thrust. These combinations and conformations are comprised of a unique and (optional) reversible and counter-gyration turbine fan-jet engine that house a unique centrally located oxygen charged and detonation driven free piston engine, co-operating and supplementing the turbine fan-jet engine driving a centrifugal supercharging impeller fan driven air pump. Which act in sequence or unison to supply ambient inducted supercharged high-pressure air (oxidant) mixed with fuel, ignited, combusted and forcefully expanded convergent toward the lower pressure zones of air and the products of combustion and detonation producing motive propulsive force and then exhausted. These propulsive driving forces are all created within the finitely varying detonation zone/zones of the unique turbine; free piston engines of this invention including the unique Ramjet type propulsive engines or Ramjet engine conformations or alternative transformation configurations of apex or vortex J-tube propulsive engines. Convergence and compression of the working gaseous fluid medium propelling the unit's engines begin expansion processes only after the moment and location these basic compressive and convergent parameters are realized and only then, fuel injection, ignition and all other expansion processes begin. The unique turbine fan-jet engine driven supercharging oxidant (air) centrifugal pump compressor may be referred to as a supercharging engine component. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10). A unit modular component constituting two integrated engines. Contained within housings composed of the free piston and supercharging turbine fan-jet engine and a Ramjet engine conformation (FIGS. 1 and 3), or (apex-vortex) J-tube Ramjet engine and/or reversible engine configurations (FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 10-81, 82, 83) and containing the means of sequencing and operating them. Fuel and pure oxidant containment vessels and electrical supply and storage and means of connecting and operating them. The free piston/turbine fan-jet engine combination (FIG. 2) is made to operate through a different category of engine cycles (“combustion-detonation”) and therefore can be referred to as a “combined-cycle engine.” The unit combination of engines acting as a combination of differently functioning engine categories, and conformations functioning co-operatively. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8, and 10) That each engine and engine conformation represents improvements in performance perimeters over other engine types and conformations of these classifications and that any of these improved engines or engine conformations satisfy the unit combined-cycle engine and Ramjet engine and engine conformation requirements. The Ramjet engine or Ramjet engine conformation may constitute a permanent component or conformation of the unit. Or may be made to eject, or otherwise be launched; utilizing other components of the unit, or adjuncts such as rockets and therein acting much as a launching platform for the ramjet and/or rocket components. The modular unit propelled by the combined-cycle fan-jet engine component until it reaches the transition operating velocity of the Ramjet engine component or configuration (approximately 3 hundred miles an hour, or lower when augmented by supercharging). The Ramjet engine or Ramjet configuration engine component is activated and then each component or configuration may be operated together or separately. Dependent claim (1) The Ramjet engine or Ramjet engine conformation, Includes a combustor inlet, a combustor centerbody assembly, a plurality of groups of fuel injectors and igniters, combustion tubes and zones and exhaust ports. An inlet housing being coupled to the combustor inlet and defining a hollow interior volume. (FIGS. 1 and 3-4, 5, 12, 24, 25, 35, 38, 47, 52, 61, 62, 65, 86, 88 and 89) The inlet housing also defining a tangent by-pass conduit cowling conducting the oxidant mass-flow from the supercharging oxidant (air) pump combined-cycle engine assembly into an apex or vortex convergent vestibule-partitioning zone. Prior to entering the Venturi conformation type combustion tube or zone of the Ramjet engine, injecting fuel into the oxidizer flow and igniting within the combustor. The Ramjet air inlet housing port may have an expander (diffuser) cone shaped cowling (FIG. 1-1 dotted lines). Made to convert into a compressor (collector) convergent funnel shaped cowling (FIG. 1-35) to maintain an adequate supply of oxidant and airflow mass to the Ramjet engine combustor tube or Ramjet conformation engine combustion zone. The use of a forward-situated diffuser geometry to prevent an excess of ram effected in-rushing cool ambient air from over-running the ability of the combustor to adequately heat it. Quenching the combustion processes and seriously effecting the engines performance. A separate annular bypass duct and partition convergent means of collecting and converging ambient air into an air-stream and the auxiliary engine for supercharge compressing the convergent air stream. Intercepted by a bypass jut-positioned conduit annular vestibule partitioned pre-chamber and recirculation zone to further maintain an adequate oxidant (air) mass flow supply. (FIG. 1- 52, 52[a], 60, 61) Venturi combustor tube inlet/inlets, steps, slots, vanes and voids forming a vestibule section or partition, may be made to act as flow directing ports, slots, tubes or steps for both of the Venturi conformation's periphery air streams and the central combustor air column. Convergent toward an apex or vortex zone. Centered convergent into and around or aft of the central Venturi tube's stratified core air-stream or around the constricting core combined-cycle supercharging turbine-jet engine apex convergent into the combustor section of the Ramjet configuration engine. (FIGS. 1 and 3-2, 4, 5, 38, 52, 52[a], 59, 60, 61, 62, 64, 65) A means of bringing about fuel injection ignition (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8 and 9-24, 25, 66). A convergent zone, a combustion and expansion zone and an exhaust port and nozzle, allowing the exhaust of combustion gases. (FIGS. 1, 3 and 10-1, 61, 62) A means of creating a greater internal to external pressure differential by having “interchangeable” variable geometry designed into the configuration. Thereby having the forward diffusion cone made so that it may become a funnel shaped convergent compressor and also being convertible and thereby becoming capable of performing as the exhaust nozzle, and vise versa. (FIGS. 1 and 10-81, 82, 83, 88, 89) (created by a basic fore and aft geometric symmetry) Allowing not only higher altitude operation and overall added performance, but a reverse direction airflow mass thrust and pressure differential which can be created by the reciprocal changing (transposed and reversible conversion) of this geometry. Whereby through a co-ordinate unit reversing and transposing process it becomes possible to bring about reverse or backward impetus and propulsion to the Ramjet engine's mode of operation. At very high altitudes with cold very rarified air, an adequate air supply must be collected. Even at great velocities the available air isn't adequate to meet the needs of the combustor and certainly not enough to over-run and quench the combustion processes. But conversely an adequate supply must be made available precluding the need for a diffuser configuration and requiring a convergent means of capturing scarce air. By convergent compression the rarified cold air need not be “slowed” as it is ambient and not in relative motion locally. But produces a velocity of interaction with the aircraft produced by the velocity of the aircraft ramming into the ambient air and forcing the air to move with the aircraft. While the air, do to inertia, still “attempts” to remain at relative rest with the external ambient environment producing the compression components. Further this rarified cold ambient air is heated by convergent compression, bringing about an elevated temperature of compressive internal interaction high enough to reach and maintain the ignition and kindling temperature of the air/fuel directly relative to the rate of the inertial velocity increase, relative to external velocity. Cold air volumetric over-run velocities are stop checked by the down stream explosive shock processes. The self regulating vortex creating Venturi phenomena and counter harmonic supersonic lateral perpendicular shock wave back-scattering compression and internalized convection heating produced by the combustion processes further down stream in the combustion chamber does not allow any cold air volumetric over run to quince the ignition and combustion processes. Funneling this cool air/fuel mixture by convergent geometry into the Ramjet combustor where it is fuel injected and preheated by radiant heat of combustion just before ignition. Further providing a method of boosting and supplementing the available air by means of the oxygen boosted supercharging engine and the direct injection of oxygen or hydrogen proxide into the Ramjet combustor by well-known means. It is necessary to produce by such oxygen injection generating oblique to perpendicular shock waves and by combustion chamber tuning to enhance pre-combustion and combustion heating of the high velocity air stream. Producing the even higher exhaust velocities necessary to produce aircraft velocities that compete with the 8 to 12 Mach velocities obtainable by Brayton cycle engine propelled vehicles and those proposed by Okamato et al.
 2005001657. (The Okamato combined cycle engine is a rocket boosted ram/scram jet engine hybrid and therefore represents a qualified comparison) This backward directed exhaust velocity is required to produce the forward velocity drive of the engine, but subtracted from it to produce (ideally) through expansion processes a near zero exhaust velocity. Relative to the external environs and thereby represents a baseline defining means of measuring the optimum efficiency of the thrust driven “Jet-propelled” engine. The rocket propelled or rocket boosted hybrid engines do not come remotely close to ending up with a nearly zero velocity contrail but can travel into space. By injecting liquid oxygen or hydrogen peroxide into the Ram jet component of the unit the Ramjet becomes an effective Rocket engine that functions well in space. (FIG. 7 A) Preferred fuels range according to uses by their specific impulse ratings Hydrazine and hydrogen peroxide produce extraordinary response velocities, kerosene is a very stable basic all around fuel and hydrogen has the highest specific impulse and burns the cleanest. The bypass intake housing from the supercharging turbine engine ducting, acting as a supporting brace conduit or cowling opening into the central tubular construct making up the interior volume of the Ramjet or jet tube engine and containing an air flow restricting valve. (FIG. 1-5, 52, 52[a], 61). A variable geometry of both entry and exit ports to the Ramjet engine or Ramjet engine conformation housing. May be produced through the employment of moveable steps, flaps, cowling, sliding surfaces or partitions, and used to alter the enclosed air column from being diffusive to being compressive and visa versa at the exhaust port. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-1, 47, 81, 82, 83 doted lines) The unit-Module of engines comprised of the Jet tube engine or Ramjet engine conformation or the apex and/or vortex stratified Ramjet engine or Ramjet engine conformation (FIGS. 1, 2, 3 10). The novel “counter-gyration” turbine fan-jet engine, novel combined detonation cycle free piston engine. The incorporation of the modulus housing, in conjunction with specifically designed aircraft or levitation, elevation or ground effect vehicles. The Modula of engines, propelling specifically designed aircraft, or levitation vehicles, included rocketry and payload, acting in concert and performing as a prescribed unit. (FIG. 12). Dependent claim (2) The novel “Gyroscopic/counter-gyration” effect created by the counter rotation of the driving and centrifugal super-charging elements of the turbine engine. Consisting of a rotating and counter-rotating, series of turbine radial vane type centrifugal compressors, separate freely driven combustion driven mediating hub. The drive impeller and compressor fans fitted with jut positioned dihedral angled vanes, effecting dihedral angles of attack to the fluid flow and oppositely transposed relative to each other. The commonly attached compressor/compressors and drive impeller/impellers consisting of vanes or blades extending radically from supporting hubs or rotor disks making up the compressor and drive impellers acting in tandem upon the centrally located drive shaft constitute one integral moving part. The combustion-mediating hub is disposed to be driven in an opposing direction to the rotation of the compressor and drive impeller. Free to maintain a differentially determined driven velocity and thereby counter-balance the gyroscopic torque produced by the rotation of the compressor and drive impellers. Positioned on a sliding carriage arraignment, disposed symmetrically upon a common cylindrical drive shaft and placed forward on this shaft is a hub and radial vane centrifugal air pump “supercharger”. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5-6, 20, 26, 27, 41) Situated on this shaft so as to allow it to become (if desired) nearly instantly reversible (FIGS. 1 and 3). This is achieved through the selective positioning of the combustion-mediating hub's carriage arraignment's position relative to the “top dead” center of rotational symmetry of the impeller elements and thereby positioning the combustion mediating hub's rim to it's nearest proximity relative to the electrode points of ignition. Thereby the mediating hub and carriage arrangement being selectively positioned axially, longitudinally “forward or aft” on the drive shaft. Causing combustion to occur on the forward or backward side of the combustion mediation hub and by selectively moving the combustion mediating hub aft of “Center”. Bringing about the reversing of the rotation of the impeller drive mechanism do to the opposite set of the angles of the drive and compressor impeller vanes. “Center” occurs when the mediating hub is in its nearest proximity to the ignition electrode points and injector jets. (FIGS. 1, 2-20, 25, 26, 27) The gyroscopic, counter-gyrating effect is inherently self-regulating. As the thrust load is increased, the equal and opposite driving forces acting upon the working surfaces of the counter rotating interfacing, centrifugal torsion and torque producing inertial counter-balancing elements, counter-rotational velocities increase accordingly until dynamic equilibrium is reached. During this time, counter-balancing inertial effects do to the counter rotating, counter balancing elements act to equalize and cancel extraneous gyroscopic torque, gyration and vibration. There is a differential relationship that exists between the momentum and velocities shared between the combustion mediating hub and the drive impeller. As a load is applied to the drive shaft impeller slowing it down an equal and opposite response is registered as an equally distributed increase in the gas drive upon the combustion mediating hub's driving vanes increasing the hubs opposite rotational velocity, proportionally and differentially preserving the conservation of momentum. The roller bearings and journals for the combustion mediating hub acting also as an equal and opposite rotating planetary friction drive mechanism between the hub and the drive shaft. The space between the interfacing surfaces of the combustion mediating hub and the dive impeller is maintained by the high pressure differential that exists there with assistance from surface modification or maintained simply with a spacer disk. A spacer disk is placed between the compressor disk surface and the mediating hub surface. A tubular central drive shaft-cylinder, which contains (housed) within the enclosed defined, drive shaft-cylinder volume, a reciprocating-rotary “free” piston driven “detonation” engine (FIGS. 1, 2 and 4). The driving detonation being brought about through the use of compressed, or chemically combined, pure oxidant and fuel and when injected under the proper conditions of temperature and pressure ignite, bringing about a detonation explosion which then drives it's cycle. These two (detonation and combustion) combined engine cycle classifications, also being called the combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine. (FIGS. 1 and 3-3, 41) The incorporation of these types of basic engine classifications into one engine unit gaining advantages not found in the standard state of the art aircraft engines. The gyroscopic aspect could be utilized to greatly add to aircraft and airframe stability. Likewise the control of airframe gyration can be controlled in such a manner as to selectively gyroscopically stabilize or destabilize the aircraft's airframe. To selectively send the aircraft off in power controlled evasive maneuvers and careful power-controlled gyrations that may be necessary to quickly control and correct these gyration maneuvers to destabilize and then stabilize the aircraft's attitude. This new dimension in gyroscopic controlled stability or deliberate power controlled gyrations adds tremendously to develop never before conceived attitudes toward a comprehensive understanding of the forces and counter forces upon an aircraft engine and airframe torque and torsion effects adding maneuverability and stability to helicopter and hovercraft. This selective power control of the gyroscopic effects is an inherent controllable and at once self-limiting aspect of the engine's torque and torsion attributes, aspects that are particularly attractive to ground vehicles that depend upon gyroscopic incidence to maintain vehicular status and stability, such as motorcycles and the like. Independent claim number [2] The “free” piston of the combined-cycle turbine-jet engine, being made of an opposing set of interconnected oppositely turned (left to right, right to left or clockwise; counter-clockwise) spiral shaped fluted two-way transposed screw or drill bit like arrangement (FIGS. 1, 2 and 4-3). The reacting, responding surface of the bit like piston face is cut to produce a critical angle to the percussive forces driving the piston and thereby producing a wedging radial annular component turning the piston into a helical driving moment. That, being disposed in this manner, within the cylinder-drive shaft, as to rebound (bounce) back and forth, reciprocating and rotationally screw driving the alternating displaced piston (FIG. 1-3, 41). Being so set within the drive shaft-cylinder, as to not allow the reciprocating piston the freedom to revolve within the cylinder without revolving the cylinder as well, thereby adding rotational thrust to the cylinder-drive shaft and always in the same rotational direction. The central reciprocating co-operating aspect of the piston shank section, being so constructed as to have a polyhedron or oval shaped cross-section section or being slotted or grooved, of the otherwise cylindrical piston arrangement (FIGS. 2, 4 and 6-3, 8, 71). Specific for fitting the piston configuration, into a cylinder, with a matching polyhedron or oval cross-section and being made long enough (reciprocation range) to allow proper reciprocation tolerances and all other clearance tolerances. Or otherwise designed to allow the reciprocating piston to revolve and thereby causing the cylinder/drive shaft to revolve, such as retention slots and pegs, keepers, key ways, spline carriage, tongue, slots and grooved sections of the piston-cylinder walls, etc. (FIGS. 2, 4, 9-3, 8, 71). The piston arrangement, being so placed within the cylinder shaft, as to be displaced and so arraigned as to add rotational torque to the displacement alternating and reciprocation driving process, always revolving in the same rotational direction, driven by the detonation of the injected fuel and pure oxidant mixture. Thereby driving the piston back and forth between the opposing detonation chambers. (FIG. 9) Where the fuel and the pure oxidant, being injected may be in either liquid, gaseous, paste plastic, or powder form. The fuel being of a preferred class of fuels consisting of either a carbohydrate or a hydrocarbon, hydrogen or the fuel and oxidant reactants being otherwise hypergolic in nature. When the preferred fuel is a powered carbohydrate, the preferred oxidants should be liquefied oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, or simply water with a minuet quantity of electrolyte added, to physically adhere to the surfaces of the power granules by surface tension. Maintaining the dissolved or held in suspension fuel and oxidizer at molecular distances or otherwise suspended as a slurry. The surface tension bonding of the fuel components is a compelling reason to utilize liquefied oxidants whenever possible to maintain the compressed fuel distances needed to maximize the detonation reaction. (1, 2 and 9-7, 11), The detonation reaction explosion brings about a like exponential response in the reciprocal rebounding and revolving of the (oppositely positioned transposed spiral configuration) helical screw shaped piston assembly. (FIG. 6). The helical or spiral grooved screw shaped piston conformation, having been fabricated in such a manner that the venting of the detonation pressurized expanding gasses produce rebounding and rotational torque. (FIG. 1-48 and FIG. 13) As the pressurized gasses of detonation are channeled through the helical screw shaped piston and exhaust porting arrangements and thereby (do to the oppositely arranged [transposed] screw spiral piston geometry) (FIG. 6-71, 72) the resultant rotational torque is always maintained in the same direction. Adding impetus to the rotating turbine shared cylinder-drive shaft. (This built-in torque directing aspect of the engine operation is not reversible) Rebounding and rotating the screw piston arrangement, back in the opposite direction, maintaining the same rotational direction, toward the opposite detonation chamber. Where fuel and pure oxidant, have been inserted, mixed and await the compression of the returning piston to produce the “carry over” inertia to produce ignition, detonation, rebound (“bounce”) and rotation torsion and torque and so continue the cycle. (FIGS. 9-7, 11) Transmitting the reciprocal motion of the rotating piston assembly into the rotary motion required of the turbine's attached impeller fan vanes. The repercussive response (detonation) is relieved, channeled through the spaces (grooves-channels) created between the spinning flukes of the reverse transposing (clockwise/counter-clockwise)(counter-clockwise/clockwise) screw thread (slot-lands) channels of the piston and exits (exhausts) external of the engine. Through the exhaust ports cut into the walls of the cylinder. (FIGS. 1, 2 and 9-48, 63 and 72) The reactant motion of these transposable reciprocation processes is realized as a rotating helix motion and is utilized to supplement the rotary operation of the turbine engine. Being capable of starting the turbine engine component's operation and otherwise supplementing its operation during high altitude flights or when operating under overload. The detonation (explosive chemical reaction) occurs in two hundred billionths of a second and the response requires the careful timing and injection of the reactants. The injectors (“shuttles”) may be “differential plungers” actuated by the detonation charge of the engine that react in nanoseconds. In the form of a catering shuttle (FIG. 9-28, 44, 45) that is explosively driven past the fuel and oxidant inlet ports, opening up the ports and thereby receiving the mixing charge. A means of connecting electricity, hydraulics, solenoid, pneumatic, mechanical linkages or springs, inter-linked (FIG. 9-28, 44, 45) to deliver the oxidizer and fuel separately to the injector metering, mixing and catering and ignition devices. The shuttles may be cut away at the reactant delivery end (FIG. 9-28, 44, 45) in such a manner as to allow an unequal dispersion of the imparted detonation drive. To laterally force the metering shuttles back in the opposite direction to reload and receive another fuel and oxidant charge or positioned by other appropriate means. Then the injector carriages being forced back by other means (springs, solenoid, hydraulic, pneumatic, mechanical or translated as a response to detonation) closing the ports, plunging (injecting) the mixing charge into the detonation chamber (FIG. 9-28, 44, 45, 49, 73). Or indirectly utilizing the force of the detonation reaction, in the opposite detonation chamber to aid in bringing about injection into the detonation chamber and time the ignition. Or by other appropriate means to indirectly inject the charge into the detonation chamber or indirectly into the other opposing detonation chamber. This can be done in the hundredths of a second time range at around 2,000 pounds or more of fuel-oxidant injection pressure do to the differential relationship that can be produced through the design of injector conformation. But these reaction procedures need not to be so forceful or so fast, to be quick and powerful enough to activate an appropriate explosive charge driven fuel injector response or activate the electric spark or glow plug or other appropriate igniter. The timing of these “catering” aspects of the engines function, control the speed of engine's operation. The spark ignition can utilize electric capacitance discharge systems that are capable of producing 100,000 volts and/or high-speed lasers or glow plugs. Depending upon the ignitable qualities of the fuels to be used, velocity of operation and the fact that the ignition may be needed only for start up warming procedures. Allowing the engine to auto-ignite (detonate). Although once in operation by electrical spark or other appropriately timed and sequenced ignition means, desirable spontaneous detonation reactions may be made to occur, without the aid of external activated ignition. If an appropriate, (under the proper conditions of pressure and temperature) mixture of the appropriate fast acting high velocity fuel and oxidant accelerator combination are used. Or through a separate means of injection whereby hypergolic reactants are injected separately into the reaction detonation chambers. This injection procedure must be carefully controlled and monitored as the velocities of this type of explosion reach 21,000 feet per second in unconfined spaces. The reactants quench or dampen and otherwise control the velocity of the reaction. In order to reach great heights and carry heavier loads and maintain cleaner exhaust emissions, engines with the potential to utilize a self-contained oxidant as well as hydrogen or other gaseous fuel containment means and the injectors are designed to handle both fuel and oxidant (FIG. 9-44, 45). Terms defining some of the design criteria relevant to detonation reaction type engines. Detonation reactions, obey an inverse power law “force is distributed inversely proportional to the square of the intervening distance from the center of reaction and reactant processes”. (The fuel and oxidizer are surface tension bonded or chemically combined to molecular distance). Making the displacement requirements of true detonation type engines small (because a disproportionate amount of the energy of formation is liberated in two one hundred billionths of a second). Engines that require the use of air containing 80 percent relatively inert nitrogen which intercedes accordingly in the energy, time and space required to mix the fuel and oxidant producing total reaction responses measured in thousands to, at best, millionths of a second. Leaving spatial distribution separation (even after physical compression measures) of the oxidant and fuel left at distances measuring in the millions of magnitudes greater then the chemically combined or surface tension bonded distances of the reactants utilized by this type “detonation” engine invention. Reducing by an exponential inverse relation the usable energy distribution. Timing, becomes of the essence because detonation reactions are so fast and powerful (but expressed at exponentially short range). Therefore such engines must be made fast reacting and strong with very small displacements to take advantage of these traits but this means that work can be done fast and efficiently. Supplanted with the injection of water and a miniscule amount of electrolytes that may be utilized to dissolve, adhere to and physically or chemically bind the fuel and oxidant. Such attributes, made obtainable by this invention, allow for and encourage the research into new materials. (Nanotube carbon matrix and carbonized epoxy laminates or tungsten carbide complex materials with diamonized or graphite ceramic high heat and impact surfaces or “metallic-glass” constructs or iron, nickel, chrome, titanium refractory alloys.) Independent claim number [3] The turbine engine aspect of the combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine, providing for the conversion of the high temperature and pressure of the combustion of fuel and oxidant into rotary motion and jet propulsion. Having an ambient air oxidizer annular inlet housing adjoining the turbine compressor fan and annular centrifugal supercharging air pump housing and defining a cylindrically conformed hollow interior volume. The ring shaped cylindrical hollow interior volume defining an annular central low pressure and high pressure partitioning arraignment for the centrifugal vane type compressor and drive impeller hubs. (FIGS. 1 and 3) The central pressure partition means being provided by the unique pressure directing, freely revolving, oppositely rotating combustion mediating hub, all set axially and symmetrically disposed upon a drive shaft and anchored upon an axially aligned positioning carriage. With vanes set radial at critical angles into these hubs which are both anchored and free revolving and being so disposed upon the positioning carriage and the engine drive shaft so as to centrifugal compress cool intake air, mediate combustion, and furnish drive. Providing thereby the ideal point location to inject fuel, intermix with compressed air, ignite and bring about combustion. Producing explosive high pressure superheated gasses. Venting the heated expanding combustion gases directly into the vanes of the interceding free-wheeling, opposite rotating combustion mediating hub and those of the drive impeller vane elements and thereby drive the centrifugal supercharging air pump (FIGS. 4-20, 26 and 27). Simotaniously driving the centrifugal compressor impeller and centrifugal supercharging air pump, compressing the induced ambient air oxidizing medium, bringing about the conditions for combustion, actuating and maintaining the driving process. A means of containing fuel, water and compressed oxygen and the means for over-boost injection and the means of distribution. Water injection should be reserved for use with the combined cycle engines. Dependent claim (3) These auto-synchronizing processes are possible do to the fact that the compressing centrifugal impeller hub and the drive impeller hub are anchored to a common drive shaft, by means of the positioning carriage. Alternatively the whole drive shaft may be moved, moving the fixed impeller elements relative to the ignition points. The compressor and drive impeller elements may be anchored directly to the drive shaft and positioned relative to their proximity to the ignition points by moving the shaft axially backward and forward. Thereby mitigating the relative selective positioning of the combustion mediation hub relative to the ignition points, transposing the combustion zone driving the drive impeller to driving the compressor impeller in a reverse rotational direction providing engine reversal. The compressor and drive impeller elements being separated from one another by an interfacing, oppositely rotating, free revolving combustion mediating hub. Whereupon they act in accordance with each other to heat and compress cool inlet air, mix with injected fuel, ignite and explosively expanding the gases of combustion out and around the circumference of the freely revolving counter rotating combustion mediating hub. (FIGS. 4-20, 26, 27 and 41). The superheated burning, explosively expanding gases act upon the uniquely arraigned and disposed vanes (offset, parallel and jut positioned, inset, transposed, mirror image symmetry) of the combustion mediating hub (FIG. 5-26). To rotate the free turning interfacing combustion mediating hub in the required opposite direction to the drive of the drive and compressor impellers. While the combustion mediating hub intercedes and forcefully selectively checks, dictates and assists the airflow and pressure direction to maintaining the required pressure differential between the compression and combustion zones. This superheated compressed gas ignites and expands explosively between the interior engine wall and against the drive impeller vanes of both the free turning oppositely rotating combustion mediating hub impeller and those of the drive impeller. The high velocity fluid gaseous drive differently compensates for the slower impeller drive element receiving the load by increasing the velocity of the oppositely rotating impeller of the combustion-mediating hub. (differential compensation) Which is a separate free turning (wheeling) oppositely rotating compressor and driving impeller stage of the engine and is free to differentially increase in velocity automatically adjusting to maintain operational performance. The drive impeller vanes being set (disposed) at approximate 45-degree dihedral, axismetric, acute and optimal oblique angles (to deflect the gas drive in both right and left-hand rotational directions) to that of the longitudinal drive shaft and gas flow direction. While the driving and compressor vanes of the combustion-mediating hub are set radial at 45 and 90 degrees, oppositely transposed mirror image and perpendicular to the gas driving flow and the combustion-mediating hub. (FIGS. 1, 3 and 4-4, 20, 26, 27, 38) Reacting to equalize the pressure differential producing gaseous inertial drive (moment). Driving the interacting combustion mediation hub impeller and the drive impeller, thereby driving the compressor impeller vanes set at 45 degree acute and optional oblique dihedral angles, angled facing into the gas flow, perpendicular and radial to the gas flow. Centrifugal compressing the intake oxidant (air) medium into the confining combustion zone between the combustion mediation hub rim and the interior of the engine housing wall. Where fuel is injected onto the combustion mediating hub, much like a splatter wheel and thereby being forcefully centrifugal mixed into the compressed, heated, confined, highly turbulent air bringing about ignition and continuing the combustion propulsion processes. Then the residual expanding gasses of combustion are exhausted. Driving the centrifugal supercharging air pump of claim 1 (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4, 8 and 10-6, 38, 75, 84) anchored to the common drive shaft, directing supplementary air convergent to the ramjet engines and engine conformations of claims 1 and
 2. Furnishing cool air to cool the engines and furnishing heated air to operate the engines and all the engine afterburners. Dependent claim (4) At full operational velocity the veritable geometry cowling convergent compressed ambient intake air (the oxidant and propulsion medium) is efficiently “ram” supplied to the centrifugal compressor pump impeller, aiding in the efficiency of supplying and compressing and thereby heating the cool intake oxidizing air medium. Over and around the interceding, interfacing, oppositely rotating free turning combustion hub and vanes and where compressed oxygen may be injected along with the fuel injection, insuring the initiating of ignition and the continuance of combustion. Driving the drive elements of the engine and maintaining the combustion cycle selectively adjusting the stoichiometry chemistry of combustion under adverse operation or engine start-up conditions. Dependent claim (5) The combined-cycle engines and Ramjet engines of claim 1, wherein the engines are incorporated into a unit or units that act together or separately. The unit of claim 1, consisting of reversible (optional) supercharging combined-cycle turbine engine, reversible (optional) Ramjet conformation engines (FIGS. 1, 3 and 10-81,82, 83). All adapted to furnish the Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engines of claims 1 and
 2. With an over-boost (supercharge) of compressed ambient air and also injected oxygen and/or hydrogen peroxide with the fuel (FIG. 7) to insure ignition. Whereby they all act in sequence finally to impart the momentum required to run the Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engines. Bringing about improved interior fluid gaseous flow dynamics. Dependent claim (6) The Ramjets of claim 1 lend themselves to designs using a set of mathematical indices. * Which are; the equation of energy, momentum, theorem of continuity relation, and equation of state, variation of specific heat and adiabatic exponents in respect to temperature, air mixture composition as well as actual cross section of the jet tube or Ramjet conformation engine. In particular there is the relationship between F1 (frontal cross-section) and F2 (frontal cross-section) which create the diffusion zone of past art. All the equations are listed * with F2/F1>infinity and F4/F2>one, coefficient of velocity CV, or coefficient of propulsion, approaches the limit value CV=one. *[National advisory committee for aeronautics technical memorandum # 1106, 10 Dec.
 1945. “A Ram-Jet engine for fighters” by E. Sanger and I. Eredt N. A. C. A. Washington. Langley Field Va.] F1 [- - - F2] - - - F3] - - - F4] frontal cross-sections. Extreme cases being stipulated, the other notable extreme occurs when the impute energy between sections F2 and F3 is exactly so great that pressure P at F3 and P at F4 is P3=P4=P1, and F4=F3=F2. Propulsion coefficients are CV=0.266 at sea level to CV=0.79 for F1/F2=0.232 at a 12 kilometer altitude. That these proportions are made variable with the use of variable geometry and that they vary accordingly but improve in overall performance over fixed geometry engines. (Example: engines without an exhaust nozzle [what is referred to now as the scram jet engine variant form] cannot be computed against experimental models with or without nozzles where F1/F2=0.165 at Mach. 0.9 at sea level and F1/F2=0.190 at Mach. and an altitude of 12 kilometers) [Relevant to this experimental data from the early fifties]. Even more evident is the reality that at very high altitudes standard jet tube (Ramjet) engines and in fact all other air aspirated non-oxygen supercharged engines stop functioning when ambient air, acting as the only oxidizing and propulsive medium, is thin (reduced) enough. That all such “fixed” ratio ramjet engines therefore have a self limiting narrow optimum range (window) of operation and become impeded and in fact are seen to slow down in operation and stop functioning at very high stratospheric altitude. Dependent claim (7) Add the supplementary oxygen boosted combined-cycle turbine-jet engine driven supercharging air pressure to P in the differential equation term of dependent claim 6). Where P′ represents the greater supply of oxidant pressure in the form of “supercharged” P and P now represents the “convergent compressed” collected central core air mass inertial “Ram” pressure differential. Include then the concomitant increase in internal and external differential air pressure to the increased central core airflow velocity and the co-dependent increase in the Venturi zone efficiency and effectiveness. Allowing the supercharged J. tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines combustor Venturi convergent apex or vortex-stratified zone to become more efficient. Becoming capable of being designed with a relatively shorter length to width ratio than that of conventional Ramjet engine's combustion chamber and operating cooler and more efficiently and effectively per pound of forward thrust. The shock induced perpendicular hypersonic waves propagating within these combustion Ramjet's chambers are capable of being fine-tuned to effect standing waves that can remain in a stationary position suspended within the chamber. Or move with velocities reminiscent of the detonation produced harmonic frequencies within the combustion (or detonation) chambers of rocket engines which have a naturally resolved resonance that hovers within Hertzian frequency ranges measured in the general range of thousands of a second. It is these shock produced harmonic responses reminiscent of rocket induced thrust impulses that surge forward adding (with great thermal dynamic efficiency) to the forward velocities achieved by these impulse Ramjet engines. Dependent claim (8) In response to the increase in the velocity of the total inertial mass thrust there is experienced an increased concomitant equal and opposite forward directed thrust to the engine configuration. Thereby the J. tube's Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine diffuser cowling can be made to exceed the 6 to 10 degrees negative angle of the fixed angle of the ramjet's diffusion cowling. To a 20 degrees positive fixed angle (FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 8-1, 22, 35 and 37 doted lines) in approximation. Varying from a cone shaped diffuser cowling into a funnel shaped convergent compressor extended culling. Then placing these elements, forward of the combustion portion of the J-tubes, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines. Thereby producing a convergent funneling, channeling means and method of collecting and concentrating the ambient external airflow mass. Thereby furnishing and ramming at velocity a concentrated compressed airflow mass stream efficiently to the Ramjet, Ramjet conformation engine combustion tube or zone (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-61, 62, 75-85). Dependent claim (9) Further then by supercharge supplementing an additional airflow mass into the ramjet engines with the combined-cycle turbine engine-supercharging configuration. The Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines are made to maintain an adequate ambient oxidant supply over an extended operational range. By maintaining the necessary external to internal pressure differential and the concomitant adequate internal airflow and combustion gas velocity and mass flow rate, giving an equal and opposite forward mass propulsive push per pound of backward thrust, improving overall engine performance and range of operation. This performance and range parameter may be extended through the use of hydrazine and oxidant injection such as hydrogen peroxide (FIG. 7-1, 2) Thereby allowing the combined unit of engines of claim 1, to remain functional over greater varying velocities, increased loading capacity and at higher altitudes. (with further assistance from oxygen/hydrogen peroxide injected boosting and from the oxygen boosted detonation cycle free-piston engine) (FIGS. 2, 3 and 9-39, 45) That this procedure is reversible and thereby the variable geometry cowling arrangement, may be made to act as the variable geometry exhaust nozzle and the variable geometry exhaust nozzle may act as the variable geometry forward culling (arrangements) and visa-versa (FIG. 10-81, 82, 83). Illustrated herein are some schematic stylized drawings of the preferred embodiments of examples of symmetric mirror image, transposable and reversible design variations of this claim. (FIGS. 10-3, 4 and 5). Dependent claim (10) The J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines of claims 1 and 2, having a combustion chamber section whose length to diameter ratio is about 1 to
 1. This refers to the classical “square” dimension but may go up to 2 to 1 and having an entrance apex or vortex stratified convergent zone and an exit exhaust divergent zone (FIG. 10-76, 82, 83). The J-tube engine, Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine with a variable extended cone shaped diffuser cowling converting then into a variable funnel shaped compressor cowling. Placed forward of the combustion chamber of the J. tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine and is not less than 6 degrees negative included angle of the diffuser cowling (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-22, 35, 75-84 dotted lines). Thereby producing a negative pressure laminant gradient relative to the external pressure within the variable extended diffuser cowling. Thereby maintaining the Venturi produced effective negative stratified air and fuel injection zone while raising the over all mean average standing pressure within the combustion tube section of the apex/vortex stratified zone during very high altitude or low altitude, low velocity operation. The J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine (FIGS. 1, 2, and 8-35) having a variable extended forward cowling. So devised that it is variable from the negative included angle to one of a positive 20 degrees included angle and acts as a convergent compressor accumulator, or “collector ram” of oncoming conducted, inducted air. Thereby producing a positive pressure gradient within the extended cowling selectively maintaining and increasing the airflow mass and velocity and maintaining and even increasing the negative differential pressure convergent efficiency potential of the Venturi tube or zone. Amplifying and enhancing the negative amplitude of the stratified air and fuel injection static pressure gradient zone of the Venturi effect within the J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines combustion tube section or zone. The J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines being constructed of a combustion chamber section only. One constructed with a Venturi apex zone and one constructed with a Venturi vestibule vortex zone and one with a recirculation vestibule zone completely surrounding the ramjet engine combustion tube and being mirror image transposable. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-61, 62, 75, 84, 100). J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines being integrated into clusters of the same engines or units of a verity of engines consisting of different numbers and combinations of combined-cycle supercharging turbo-fan jet engines and rocket engines (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8, 10 and 12). J-tube, Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines comprising at least one forward and one stern (aft) moveable elements (nozzle) making up the variable geometry components for tuning the fluid flow dynamics of the module conformation. Along with sliding tubular combustor sections for tuning the vestibule reverberation and recirculation apex and vortex focusing convergent Venturi combustor cambers and zones. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-1, 22, 35 and 75-84) Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine comprising forward and stern (aft) nozzle variable elements and Venturi vestibule apex pre-chambers and combustion chambers that have been set into position symmetrically, to allow transposition and allow the reversing of engine function and the direction of propulsion. (FIG. 10-78, 79, 80) Dependent claim (11) The elimination of standard static combustor or rotating combustion chambers in the turbo-jet engine is achieved by ejecting the explosive force directly upon and rotating the combustion mediating hub vanes directly by deflection without any intervening combustion chambers. Simotaniously directing the explosion upon the oppositely retreating drive impeller vanes allowing both sets of vanes to avoid confronting the explosion by “turning directly into the explosion” but always retreating and turning by being driven by deflection away from the explosion. Therefore the vanes or blades are designed relatively flat, more like paddles than airfoils. Eliminating the need to shape them into more fragile airfoil or constant camber aerodynamic constructs as is standard in the state of the art turbine or turbofan aircraft engines but rather representing more robust reflecting rebounding angled deflecting platforms. The design of the vanes (the term vane implies a meaning reminiscent of weather vanes, which could be misleading) concerns forces that are more like those that effect the designs of paddle wheels or Pelton water turbine cup like conformations or light reflective surfaces. Because shock effects behave more like a fluid with the density of water and follow molecular statistical and ballistics effects. Shock terms involve impacting forces that can be many times those experienced in standard engine combustion processes. Further symmetry of both sides of the vane designs is a requirement in versions of the reversible engine designs. The high velocity gas molecules rebound (ricochet) off the surfaces of the impeller vanes at angles of incident and angles of reflection producing a positive driving pressure, dependent upon the specific impulse of the fuel. (Density Functional Theory) Directed from the compressor by the spinning counter rotation of the combustion mediating hub and the offset set position of the ignition points. Exploding upon the exposed drive vane angled surface, while being directed by deflection and inertial impetus away from the adjacent drive impeller vane and into the receding, divergent reduced pressurized space of the oppositely rotating set of drive impeller vanes. Creating a low-pressure gradient on the reverse, anterior or “shadow” side of the adjacent impeller vane and a relatively high pressure on the retreating exposed angled surface of the down stream set of the oppositely-rotating drive vanes. By this deflection, lines of least resistance are effected and the driving gasses follow these lines of least resistance, producing equal and opposite thrust. The energy of deflection remaining as kinetic energy residing in the inertial rotational drive of the impeller drive system. The series or sets of drive impeller vanes are opening or being driven apart by the explosion and one half of the explosion is deflected by the first set of mediating hub driven vanes and focused into the vanes of the retreating driven impeller vanes. Preventing the explosion from directly confronting the oncoming vanes by deflection, nullifying the retreating interacting supersonic shock modes. Through subtractive cancellation produced by the divergent super-imposition of the pecks and troughs of the reflected hypersonic waveform interference produced by the reflection from the adjacent impeller vane, thereby creating further lines of least resistance. Directing and focusing the remaining residual energy terms and the other unengaged half of the explosion along these lines of least resistance directly into the direction of opposite rotation of the oppositely retreating set of driven impeller drive vanes. These drive impeller vanes are set to receive and rebound (ricochet) the gas stream perpendicularly (at dihedral right angles) off 45-degree dihedral angled opposing vane surfaces. Rebounding and deflecting the explosive energy out of the way of the oncoming impeller vane directly striking the next series of drive vanes rotating in the opposite direction of rotation. Resolved by the drive train into a single direction of rotation. Produced by straightforward driving processes greatly overriding other less forceful and indirect driving processes. With each rebound directly gaining one half the energy inherent in the gas mass inertial velocity, this exchange rate is exponentially and algorithmically established relative to the velocity of the impinging gas stream. The rebounding molecules disrupt the molecules forming the shock wave front and the energy is absorbed and converted to heating the remaining unburned air/gas mixture, quickly completing combustion. The design ratio of the width to length dimensions of the driven vanes should be keep at as high an aspect (shortened vane width, relative to length) as possible. To prevent too much rebound interference from the negative or shadow (anterior) adjacent surfaces of the vanes as well as eliminating drag on the driven vain. The number of vanes and distance between the vanes for both compressor and driver impellers depend on square area and the number of revolutions per minute the impellers are designed to operate at and are a result of matching the work load requirements to the specific impulse of the fuel. There are benefits to dynamically shaping the vanes to reduce friction, gain strength, reduce weight and extract the greatest amount and efficiency of drive. (FIG. 20) Where a high-pressure turbine is standardly placed immediately after the static combustor nozzles and is designed to extract energy from the hot high-pressure nozzle constricted gas stream by producing a positive pressure differential upon the convex positive pressure side of the airfoil vane-like turbine blade. While producing a negative pressure differential on the concave side of the blade causing the blades to be pushed or forced from the high pressure zones into the low pressure zones thereby bringing about propulsion drive. It has been the standardized mode apriori to extract the drive of turbine engines by circomspious means. “Each airfoil includes opposite pressure and suction sides and extends in cord between leading and trailing edges. Each platform has a scalloped flow surface including a bulge adjoining the pressure side adjacent the leading edge, and bowl adjoining the suction side aft of the leading edge.” Tam et al. (Suction is a pressure differential usually associated with ambient air pressure. Which is set at around 15 pounds per square inch between the negative to positive pressure gradients. While the differential pressure gradients that are routinely created by explosive combustion events within these engines are measured in the thousands of pound range per square inch. We can assume that the suction gradients being referred to are in the later category) This indirect and convoluted method of extracting energy requires a relatively non-turbulent gas flow stream running more or less parallel “axismetric” and longitudinal with the vane and the angle of attack is reduced to a minimum. Limiting the use of the very high velocity explosive power directing and shock related combustion events. The effective creation and maintenance of unperturbed negative and positive pressure zones represents the determinant parameters defining the limits of the functioning drive capabilities of these One claim of the turbine-jet engine embodiments of this invention is the utilization of two 45 degree opposite reflected angles. That adds up to a 90-degree angle which represents the angles of incidence and reflection of the driving forces being transmitted in both directions. One directly transmitting the energy of incident to the drive shaft and the other indirectly by mediating the responding obtainable drive potential through the mediating hub. To culminate into the rotational direction of the engines drive shaft evenly dividing the load and drive actuating and controlling differential components thereby automatically adjusting them one to the other. In aerodynamic terms critical angle applies to the angle of attack at which there is a sudden change in the airflow around an airfoil with subsequent decrease in lift and increase in drag until stall is produced. With the realization in the late 1950's of the “supercritical” airfoil phenomena, came the realization that at very high velocities the aerodynamic effects on an airfoil (wing) were reduced to two basic relevant factors, structural integrity and angle of attack. The reduction of friction drag by reducing the cross-section dynamics to as thin a wing as possible and that this is achieved primarily through constant camber surface construction. At supersonic velocities the “lifting” camber was moved further back, the wing thickness was reduced to a minimum and the lifting effect was primarily a result of the angle of attack. For the airfoil asymmetrical camber-lifting construction relying upon suction etc., these “lifting” effects become irrelevant at very slow stall speeds, too a high angle of attack or very high “supersonic” velocities at which the negative and positive pressure zones dissolve. The re-entry angle of attack of a lifting body from space into the upper atmosphere is 40 degrees and gives a rough approximation to the established use of an appropriate critical angle used with gas flow velocities in the range of 25 Mach, in rarefied atmospheres. The percussion and shock velocities inside a combustion turbine engine revolve around the speed of sound in compressed dense atmospheres and become greater in detonation related supersonic and hypersonic reaction velocities. All of which derive their very high reaction velocities directly from those of electrons being exchanged in chemical reactions and giving up their momentum directly and indirectly to atoms and molecules through perfectly elastic responses that are measured in billionths of a second. The response of a foil to the very rapid and highly fluctuating events that occur in these explosive atmospheres is relatively slow (an average resolved in thousands of a second) and yet depends on and derives the maximum working response directly at the molecular level. Deriving the angle of incidence or reflected angle of response primarily from terms that are a result of direct molecular interaction between the driving gases and the vane surface along with aerodynamic effects that act upon the vane. The effective creation and maintenance of unperturbed negative and positive pressure zones represents the determinant parameters defining the limits of the functioning drive capabilities of turbine engines that reportedly gain their dynamics solely from aerodynamic foil effects. The highly efficient detonation like combustion processes obtained in variant embodiments of this invention are not as detrimentally effected by hypersonic percussion combustion processes and are designed to produce them, taking full advantage of these high speed phenomena. These very same shock or hypersonic phenomena can become so disruptive they destroy the separation of the delicately arranged negative and positive pressure zones of airfoil type vane designs. The percussive processes driving the vanes or foils, which are set at 45-degree dihedral angles to the opposing 45-degree, oppositely rotating driving impeller vanes, and are delivered directly to their surfaces. There are no other influencing effects that can be produced to seriously impact or disrupt these overwhelmingly forceful and straightforward percussive driving processes. Airfoil like vane designs may be utilized to scavenge the gas flow energy in more stabilized and/or less turbulent gas flow stages further down stream of the first stage explosive percussion driving events to derive added efficiency and drive from the engines. The claim of the application of driving force directly upon the surface of the driving vanes set at a 45-degree inclined dihedral angle of attack to the gas flow stream and is a dominant driving phenomena of the turbine engine component as embodied in this invention. But not the only one. Varying the angles of attack of the drive vane is a preferred method to obtain over-all optimum drive performance. In state of the art turbine engine vain or blade design the negative and positive pressure zones intercommunicate so vigorously between these segregated air-foil produced pressure zones. That (if these differentials are the only pressure differentials driving the turbines) hyper or supersonic turbulent events bring about dynamic equilibrium and propulsion stall, ending these engines ability to function. In the engines of this invention the action of the explosive combustion force upon the drive impeller vanes is transposed directly though the commonly shared drive shaft. Through the flow directing action of the oppositely rotating combustion-mediating hub a subsequent doubling of the apparent closing velocity of the resulting two opposing and convergent eclipsing compressor vane arraignment results. Producing an apparent closing and wedging compressing velocity greater than the average compressed air flow velocity. Which moves outward diagonally and laterally to the direction of the counter rotation of the impeller vanes squeezed between the converging vanes and the interior engine housing wall and through the pressure dividing combustion mediating hub's clearance dimension represented by the combustion mediating hub's proximity to the fuel metering ports. Effectively reducing the interceding restricted and confined fluid flow rate rapidly toward zero. Which is then accelerated by combustion and strikes the vane surface of the drive vane impeller. The performance of the vanes involves many varied and diverse functions which together influence vane design. The flow directing combustion mediating hub separating the compressor zone from the drive zone focuses these fluid flow force vectors into fluid compression fields. Efficiently compressing, and building up the internalized air pre-heating processes. Increasing the intermixing chemical reaction rate, capability and capacity potential, decreasing the chemical reaction time, decreasing any excess pre-heat required to maintain the kindling or ignition temperature of the air/fuel mixtures. Producing an ideal, stable and localized fuel injection and ignition zone. Increasing the achievable peak overall post-combustion expansion and cooling processes and thereby increasing the achievable rate and velocity of the combustion reaction and thereby increasing the propulsive potential of the engines. Further the impinging back pressure exerted by the back scattering oppositely (forward) directed explosive shock wave created by the combustion front, completely counters (checks) the backward incoming compressed air flow. Counteracting the disruptive attributes of these shock waves and converting them into very effective compression heat producing and fluid flow checking and directing force vectors. Further reducing the overall volume of the compressed air charge within [between] the flow directing vanes, converted by these means of shock wave compression into heated compression field points. Producing the ignition “points” where the pressure and temperature become ideal for efficient ignition and combustion expansion driving processes. Creating a localized zone where oxygen and fuel reach stoichiometry and the flame temperature approaches adiabatic flame temperature. Thereby increasing the efficiency of the combustion process by reducing the time required of these processes and gaining localized flame retention stability, a cooler overall operating temperature, with concomitant flame out prevention capability. Ignition does not occur until fuel/air mixing, pressure and temperature reach the point and position that first reaches the mixtures ignition temperature. Any delay simply automatically produce combustion down stream further into the combustion-mediating zone of the rotating combustor vane or into the drive impeller zone driving the cycle unless ignition does not occur at all. The total lateral fluid flow rate approximates zero as the two counter rotating set of opposing compressor vanes squeeze and compress the induced air fuel inter-mixing liquid and gaseous fluid complex into a space convergent toward zero (the ideal ignition point). Where fuel injection orifices and ignition points are located. This highly compressed superheated air is “spun out” in the direction of rotation into the oncoming oppositely rotating drive vanes, tortured to a near stop. Fuel is injected and ignited within the constricted space created by the compressor impeller and the combustion-mediating hub impeller rim, the combustor vanes and the interior wall of the engine housing. The engine-housing interior wall acting as an efficient effective cooling surface maintaining easy cooling excess to the exterior of the engine. Further reflecting the energy of the explosive back to aid in driving the drive impellers and produces gaseous flow stop and go accelerations. In the turbine engine of this invention, a localized and stabilized zone of ignition is maintained in the relative stopped position, while maintaining an over all superior velocity match of the impellers momentum to the hypersonic velocities obtainable in the combustion, detonation processes of the fuels. The highly efficient detonation like combustion processes obtained in variant embodiments of this invention are not as detrimentally effected by hypersonic percussion combustion processes as the standard state of the art turbo-jet and turbine engines. That are built with static or rotating confining and restricting combustion reaction chambers that are very sensitive to shock events. With the turbine-jet engine of this invention there are no static confining and inclosing combustion chambers to retain and hold back the reactions. The reactions explode directly upon the driving impeller vanes designed to respond to these high velocity detonation reactions by moving with the forces rather then restricting, restraining and being disrupted or destroyed by them. In the driving of the impeller the apparent closing or scissoring of the interacting vanes are “seen” from the relative point of view of the propelling gas steam as being pushed apart and separating on divergent retreating platforms. Making their relative velocities subtractive rather than additive. Reducing their proclivity toward the interference induced production of disruptive shock wave events and the production of shock waves at the closing, indexing apex of the vanes convergent angles, as well as at the vane tips, as is the case with the compressor vanes. Thereby greatly increasing the building up of the convergent compressive elements within the flow conducting and directing space allotted between the counter rotating vanes as well as the interior engine housing. The compressed, confined air/fuel therein being counter checked, turbulently intermixed, super-compressed, pre-heated, by the shock wave and the radiant heat of the combustion occurring just “down stream” of the fuel injection and ignition sites. Further combustion and expansion processes occur producing equal and opposite propulsion and motor response to the revolving combustor hub and vanes. Acting thereby directly upon the drive vanes of the drive impeller and expanding outward exhausting through the engine's exit port. In Otto cycle engines the fuel is introduced and mixed with ambient air in the manifold prior to (upstream of) the intake valve and has a time interval during the compression phase to become well mixed. The time involved in completing the fuel and air oxidant combustion processes can be measured in thousands to millionths of seconds. Determined by the volatility and specific impulse of the fuel and the close proximity of the molecular reactants. Internal combustion, positive displacement Otto cycle procedure has some parameters of operation that require careful considerations. The explosive air/fuel pre-mixture is sensitive to pre-detonation during the compression phase of the Otto cycle engine operation involving the kindling temperature and volatility of the fuel, that is measured as an octane number. Detonation or pre-ignition of the explosive air/fuel mixture during compression is very detrimental to the Otto cycle internal combustion engine and restricts such operating design parameters as the limited range of compression ratios and the necessity of resorting to a fuel octane rating. In positive displacement engines the piston is brought to a complete stop at top dead center on each stroke, thereby presenting a localized, stabilized zone of ignition. For the stopped piston to build up velocity relative to the speed of detonation reactions is relatively slow and the reaction tends to accelerate the piston beyond it's ability to accelerate even with the accelerating impetus added by the fly-wheel. Where as the turbine is in rotary motion at around its operational velocity. These often destructive shock events do not occur, as readily when the vanes are imbedded in a driving fluid medium that is already moving near the speed of sound (the drive impeller vanes rather than the compressor vanes). The driving flow velocity can exceed the velocity of sound by many times, approaching 14 Mach or more depending upon the fuels and oxidants used and achieving 50 Mach in rocket exhaust velocity into unconfined space. The velocity of the driven vane is always less than the velocity of the driving fluid velocity and the impinging positive flow mass pressure is exerted on the upstream or positive side of the driven vanes. The shock waves are produced in-between as well as on the negative, after or shadow side of the wave propagating surfaces. Shock waves do not exceed the speed of sound on their own for any extended time and fall behind. The disruptive energy represented by the shock wave events is constantly redistributed between the positive and negative pressure zones of the vane's interacting and airflow interconnected and inter-communicating surfaces. While exchanging negative to positive pressure zones that effectively cancel out the oppositely disposed pressure zones produced by the oppositely rotating converging vanes, thereby becoming equalized. These very same shock or hypersonic phenomena can become so disruptive they destroy the separation of the delicately arranged negative and positive pressure zones of airfoil type vane designs. The apparent closing velocity of the opposite opposed interfacing and converging sets of driving impeller vanes that represent variant embodiments of the invention. In the driving impeller the apparent closing or scissoring of the interacting vanes are “seen” from the relative point of view of the propelling gas steam as being pushed apart and separating on divergent retreating platforms. Making their relative velocities subtractive rather than additive. Reducing their proclivity toward the interference induced production of disruptive shock wave events and the production of shock waves at the closing, indexing apex of the vanes convergent angles, as well as at the vane tips, as is the case with the compressor vanes. The straightforward and forceful drive produced by the hypersonic velocities of gas flow realized by the percussive explosions of the fuel, air and/or pure oxidant. Are optimally realized when reflected from a vane or foil surface set at a 45-degree dihedral angle of attack to the gas stream. But may be reduced to 30 degrees or less depending on the velocities the engines are designed to run at or the number of drive turbine impellers that are to be implemented. The length to width high aspect or ratio of the vane dimension should be kept to a minimum width to keep back-scattering interference to a minimum by allowing the expanding gasses to be deflected clear into driving the main oppositely rotating drive vane. Airfoil like vane designs may be utilized to scavenge the gas flow energy in more stabilized and/or less turbulent gas flow stages further down stream of the first stage explosive percussion driving events to derive added efficiency and drive from the engines. The claim of the application of driving force directly upon the surface of the driving vanes set at a 45 degree angle of attack to the gas flow stream. Plus the equal and opposite deflected driving thrust produced thereby is the dominant driving phenomena of the turbine engine component as embodied in this invention. Varying the angles of attack of the drive vane is a preferred means and method to obtain overall optimum drive performance. The negative and positive pressure zones intercommunicate so vigorously between the segregated airfoil produced pressure zones that (if these differentials are the only pressure differentials driving the turbines) hyper or supersonic turbulent events bring about dynamic equilibrium and propulsion stall. Ending these vanes or turbine blade aerodynamic constructs ability to function and they do not define the reflected symmetry that allows them to produce the same functioning driving processes that cover the full range of operation and then still function as well in reverse. Dependent claim (12) In a variant embodiment of the invention not only are the drive impeller vanes set at a 45-degree angle to the lateral rotation direction of the impeller disk and the longitudinal axial gas flow direction. (FIG. 13) But are also set inclined, tilted at a 45 degree cant (oblique, acute tangent angle) nearly tangent to the rim of the drive impeller disk while maintaining the 45 degree twisted or turned, oblique inclined angle. (Not shown) Whereby this “cant” oblique tangent angle not only adds 45 degrees of cant or skew to the 45 degree driving gas deflection angle of the vanes. But causes the flow force to be transferred (“tilted”) skewed forward of the center of effort and revolution of the driven impeller disks and drive shafts. This 45 degree offset, inclined tilt to the dihedral angle of the driving vanes causes the driving force to be expressed forward of the driven impeller's rotational center of throw, do in part to the lapse of time delay in the explosive combustion detonation processes. Effectively keeping the driving force pushing the drive vanes away from the points of dynamic equilibrium and the point of stall, and tilting (tripped) skewed into the direction of rotation. (FIG. 13) Preserving the conservation of momentum and gaining drive advantage over vanes set only at the singular 45 degree fixed dihedral angle to the longitudinal gas flow direction. Trapping drive gases in the apex of the wedge produced by the complex acute tangent dihedral angle to the impeller drum rim. Reflecting and focusing them back unto the incoming shock waves driving the vanes, braking up the waves and redistributing them as less distressing events and adding to the heating of the combusting fluid medium. The straight 45-degree dihedral angle drive vane has very appropriate applications dependent upon fuel and load considerations. The engines turn in independent and oppositely directed rotation and build up momentum, this is referred to as “carry over” and defined as the “Conservation of Momentum”. Once in motion the gas driving momentum is translated, by means of the vanes into the rotational motion of the impellers, following the lines of least resistance and must be able to produce “carry over” inertia. This may seem almost trivial but under situations of near stall, this tilt added to the vane angle turns the tables, so to speak, to keep the engines turning over. Dependent claim (13) Ramjet engine or Ramjet conformation engine (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-2, 38, 52, 52[a], 60, 61), having an element of the forward cowling including some portion surrounding the combustion chamber. Partitioned and ported with selectively adjustable tubular elements or tubular combustor ducts to form a tunable Venturi apex or vortex vestibule and recirculation and preheating zone. Attached by adjustable means of ducting, to the auxiliary centrifugal impeller fan supercharging air pump of the incorporated combined-cycle turbine engine. Partitioned to selectively divert a first portion of the airflow into a bypass duct or a series of tubular ducts or combustor ducts. Ramjet engines or Ramjet conformations (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12), including a plurality of air, oxygen and fuel injection and igniter means. To be mixed with a second portion of the airflow peripheral to the central core air stream and the central primary combustor (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 7 and 9-12, 57, 61, 62). Ducted into and through the tubular combustor ports or dump step and quarl (where the mixture may or may not be ignited) into the low-pressure primary (apex) zone of the Ramjet apex engine or Ramjet conformation engine. Co-operatively acting to supply the oxidant, fuel and mass airflow rate required supplementing the drive of the Ramjet engines or Ramjet conformation engines of claims 1 and
 2. Thereby maintaining the stoichiometeric conditions and air mass velocity required for maintaining the proper functioning of the Ramjet and Ramjet confrontation or apex or vortex J-tube engines. Dependent claim (14) Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine or J-tube apex or vortex engines. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 10) Having ducting from the auxiliary supercharging air pump of claim 1 with impeller vanes set perpendicular to the air column and/or partially angled as required to supercharge the Ramjet engine and to supercharge the turbine engine component. Furnishing both cooling and oxidant air mass to the turbine-jet or turbine-jet conformant engine supercharger compartment. Constructed with stationary or moveable vanes or partitions perforated with tubular combustor ports or dump step and quarl conformation, convergent to the after section (vestibule zone) of the combustion chamber tube compartment (apex, vortex zone) of the Ramjet engines or Ramjet conformation engine. Ducting being gated or otherwise diverted, by-passed or bled from the auxiliary air pump supercharger engine component of the unit's distribution ducting. To converge or otherwise conduct auxiliary air or other oxidant into the low-pressure apex or vortex vestibule zone of the peripheral Ramjet engine/engines (FIGS. 1, 2, and 3-38, 47, 52, 52[a], 61, 62, 64) or Ramjet conformation engine or J. tube engine combustion tube or section. Forming a zone of recirculation and radiant preheating of the induced air, divergent focusing and preparing it for ram injection into the combustion zones of the Ramjet engines and combustion in the afterburner combustion zones of the engines (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 10). This ducting forming a forward element comprising the bypass oxidant ducting partitioned recirculation and preheating zone. To divert the convergent Ram charged first portion of the oxidizer flow to the apex or vortex convergent focusing and Venturi amplifying vestibule or tube combustion zone of the Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine or apex or vortex J-tube engine. Producing a second interceding cooler and lower velocity peripheral stratum of recirculation and inducted air adjacent to the combustor wall to aid in reducing combustor thermal loss and friction inefficiencies. Improving the internal to external differential pressure gradient associated with the convergent ram-charged air and auxiliary supercharged air induction by the Venturi type combustion tube configuration of this invention. Thereby being convergent converted efficiently into increasing the Venturi combustion tube's central air column's mass flow velocity. The overall average cross-sectional airflow velocity is somewhat reduced after being completely stopped and checked by the explosive discharge produced within the combustor. The lost airflow velocity is quickly is quickly and efficiently made up with the aid of induced supercharging producing the mass flow intermixing rate amplification methods inherent in these designs. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8,10-1, 52, 52[a], 61, 62, 64, 75-85). Dependent claim (15) The Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engines, being auxiliary supplemented by the free-piston actuated component of the combined-cycle turbine engine. Further providing the required internal self-contained pressurized pure oxidant separate containment and distribution means (FIG. 9), to supply the additional pressurized pure oxidant supplement required. The free-piston detonation cycle engine providing thereby a means, to adequately preheat and maintain the ambient airflow mass rates necessary for the adequate propulsion and combustion required for the ambient air combustion engines of the unit. (Except any included rockets) Thereby producing the means to supplement the oxygen and air-mass necessary for the optimum performance and operation of the ramjet engine as well as the unit of the supercharging auxiliary engines of claim 1 at low velocities, heavy work loads and high altitudes, as well as maximum obtainable functional velocity. Being capable of improved operation with an otherwise inadequate supply of ambient airflow to furnish the required amount of propulsive medium and containing the required available oxidant. (not shown) The combined-cycle turbine engines having bypass air-cooling arrangement. Whereby the bypass ducting also acts to supercharge convergent conducted air into the Venturi vortex vestibule combustor tube and zone of a Ramjet engine conformation embodiment (FIG. 3) or the apex and/or vortex J-tube engines. Whereby this air cooling arrangement is also capable of utilizing cooling air to furnish the required heated oxidant flow to operate afterburner configurations. Including peripheral dump step and quart fuel injector arrangements, with the combined-cycle turbine engine to supercharge additional air into the dump step low- pressure zone. Prior to (presiding) the exhaust nozzles of the J-tube and apex or vortex stratified J-tube engines, Ramjet engines or Ramjet conformation engine, acting thereby as the afterburner combustor (FIGS. 1, 3, and 10-52, 53, 62, 64, 65, 75-84). Further oppositely directed air columns, at times, being required to offset the jut position of the auxiliary centrifugal airflow. Both the exhaust outlets of the Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine and apex or vortex stratified J-Tube engine and of the combined-cycle turbine-jet engine of claim
 1. Being capable of being partially closed by the variable geometry cowling, producing an afterburner combustor zone and exhaust port nozzle effect. (FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 8 and 10-1, 47, 75-84) The combined-cycle turbine-jet engines and the J-tube and apex or vortex stratified J-Tube engines Ramjet and Ramjet conformation engine (components of the units). Having a surface of the stern (aft) movable element, (FIGS. 1 and 3-1, 47, 62, 64, 65) being made to move into a selected position partially closing the exhaust nozzle conduit of the engines bringing about a greater pressure differential within the volumetric confines of the engines. (The nozzle effect) The Ramjet engines or Ramjet conformation engine of claim 1, wherein the variable areas geometry cross-section ratio exhaust expansion zone and nozzle and likewise the variable area geometry of the forward diffuser and/or compressor movable cowling assembly act co-operatively. To insure a negative internal pressure to external pressure differential gradient while maintaining overall forward thrust. Including a plurality of throat closure elements that are movable between a first position and a second position. The variable area air intake cowling, having a first smaller then larger inlet area, when the throat inlet elements are set in the first inlet position. The cowling then has a larger to smaller throat area when they are set in the second inlet outlet position. Finally they have a second exhaust outlet area that in turn is first a larger to smaller cross-section area for the exhaust nozzle outlet than that of the exhaust inlet and visa versa controlling the exhaust pressure within the confines of the expansion zone. That they are selectively synchronized to maintain and intensify this vital inverse differential pressure and fluid mass flow relationship. (FIGS. 1, 3, 8 and 10) The elements may be constructed similar enough to be made to act in an opposite series of configuration changes that act to transpose and reverse the whole pressure gradient operation of the J-tube engine. Thereby reversing the operation of the J-tube engine as depicted (FIGS. 10-78, 79, and 80) accordingly. Herein is an illustrated schematic view of another preferred variation of an apex or vortex stratified J-tube engine Ramjet engines and Ramjet conformation engine, depicting an open vestibule Venturi apex and/or vortex recirculation combustion zone (FIG. 10). Wherein sliding or hinged elements, are employed in such a like transposed manner as to allow them to be reversed (FIG. 10-81, 82, 83). Dependent claim (16) The unit assemblies of claim 1, supplying fuel and oxidants and ignition to maintain operation of the engines (Tanks, pumps, tubes, ducts, wires, batteries, generators and the like)(not shown). The combustor (combustion tube zone) assemblies of the J-tube engines of claims 1 and 2, being connected within the units by tubes leading from pumps attached to fuel tanks. These in turn have attached an array of nozzles circumferentially or cross-section perpendicular and laterally “screen” spaced apart from one another. Radial or laterally positioned outward from each other or otherwise positioned apart from one another and at the positions of intersection of the bypass inlet conduits and that of the J-tube engine's combustor intake ports or dump step configurations. (FIGS. 1, 3, 7 and 8-12, 57, 70). Wires of claims 8, 15 from batteries to coils leading from timing devices, bringing high voltage electricity to spark generated ignition and combustion, down stream of the spark generators. (Catering systems) That such appropriate electrical elements are furnished throughout the units to meet all other required needs. (not shown) To furnish electricity to all other engines, motors, pumps, lights, instruments, switches, etc. Wherein the series of combined engines are arranged such that they're longitudinal axes are aligned in a common plain. That the common plain is generally parallel to a longitudinal axis of the unit and it's contained engines (all Figs.) although a pivotal or hinged arraignment between engines may be warranted. Further containing the arraignments for furnishing the required compressed oxidant for use when the combined series of engines making up the unit have a velocity that is less than a predetermined Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine transitional velocity presently set at approximately 3 to 4 Mach. Or are otherwise operated under overloaded and/or engine starting conditions or while operating in the thin atmospheres of high altitude and to operate the core detonation driven free piston engine. Dependent claim (17) There are other types of suitable detonation cycle engines and combustion cycle engines that may be located secured to or within the unit. Placed in such a manner, as to act as supercharging engines and take off assist devices or as the main boosters when the unit enters the outer reaches of the atmosphere, acting to supply the required velocity to the payload booster rocket. (FIG. 12) The units, being made up of a particular type of combined-cycle turbine fan-jet engine, or other appropriate engine and at least one Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine. One preferred variant turbine fan-jet engine, designed to operate in one direction only, is referenced in an embodiment as represented in the transparent view (FIG. 13). Distinguished basically by the change in the design of the driven impeller by the addition of a 45-degree cant or skewed angle to the dihedral 45 degrees of the drive vanes. Each Ramjet or Ramjet conformation engine including a combustor inlet bypass conduit interconnecting the combustor to the combined-cycle turbine-jet engine or other appropriate engines supercharging pump housing and may act as part of the units configuration. (FIG. 1-5, 52, 53, 59, 60, 62, 64, 65) 